Anonymous wrote:Does this mean that USC and Stanford can no longer flag "development" students in admission (i.e., rich kids whose parents can donate $10M+)?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our family is not a big donor, so really no skin in the game. That said, is any one concerned states are overreaching into private schools?
How can a state mandate a private universities admissions process? What’s next? Making private universities be non-religious? Or making sure a private school accepts so many first gen students?
This.
This is huge overreach by the state and social engineering in a private entity.
A private entity that gets tax exemption status and government funds.
All non-profits are tax exempt. Is that really our criteria?
Feds to the [___] art museum: Starting today, you may no longer "reward" big donors -- including donors who gave you painting -- by gifting them hard-to-get tickets for hot special exhibits like the Impressionists.
Why: "it's not fair. Because too many white people, and a smattering of Asians. They're overrepresented in the museum donor class and, since we know how to run your non-profit better than you do, we insist you privilege more Black people or poors when it comes to deciding who gets to see the Impressionist exhibit. "
Repeat with every single non-profit you can think of. The Cub Scouts, Girls on the Run, the Leukemia Walk on the Mall, Sons of Italy ... come to think of it, the Sons of Italy have waaaay too many men. And just about all of them are white.
I will go propose some targeted legislation !
Do museum donors expect their kids to get some special consideration? Ridiculous comparison.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are so, so many bitter and sour grapes kids and their parents on this thread.
I hate to be the one to tell you this, but, you're still not getting in. Yale not immediately ushering in the triple legacy applicant upcoming in 2028 doesn't clear the decks for you.
And your envy is nonproductive and ugly
No dog in this fight. My kid is definitely not an Ivy+ quality kid but legacies are inherently unfair.
Anonymous wrote:There are so, so many bitter and sour grapes kids and their parents on this thread.
I hate to be the one to tell you this, but, you're still not getting in. Yale not immediately ushering in the triple legacy applicant upcoming in 2028 doesn't clear the decks for you.
And your envy is nonproductive and ugly
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our family is not a big donor, so really no skin in the game. That said, is any one concerned states are overreaching into private schools?
How can a state mandate a private universities admissions process? What’s next? Making private universities be non-religious? Or making sure a private school accepts so many first gen students?
This.
This is huge overreach by the state and social engineering in a private entity.
A private entity that gets tax exemption status and government funds.
All non-profits are tax exempt. Is that really our criteria?
Feds to the [___] art museum: Starting today, you may no longer "reward" big donors -- including donors who gave you painting -- by gifting them hard-to-get tickets for hot special exhibits like the Impressionists.
Why: "it's not fair. Because too many white people, and a smattering of Asians. They're overrepresented in the museum donor class and, since we know how to run your non-profit better than you do, we insist you privilege more Black people or poors when it comes to deciding who gets to see the Impressionist exhibit. "
Repeat with every single non-profit you can think of. The Cub Scouts, Girls on the Run, the Leukemia Walk on the Mall, Sons of Italy ... come to think of it, the Sons of Italy have waaaay too many men. And just about all of them are white.
I will go propose some targeted legislation !
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our family is not a big donor, so really no skin in the game. That said, is any one concerned states are overreaching into private schools?
How can a state mandate a private universities admissions process? What’s next? Making private universities be non-religious? Or making sure a private school accepts so many first gen students?
This.
This is huge overreach by the state and social engineering in a private entity.
A private entity that gets tax exemption status and government funds.
All non-profits are tax exempt. Is that really our criteria?
Feds to the [___] art museum: Starting today, you may no longer "reward" big donors -- including donors who gave you painting -- by gifting them hard-to-get tickets for hot special exhibits like the Impressionists.
Why: "it's not fair. Because too many white people, and a smattering of Asians. They're overrepresented in the museum donor class and, since we know how to run your non-profit better than you do, we insist you privilege more Black people or poors when it comes to deciding who gets to see the Impressionist exhibit. "
Repeat with every single non-profit you can think of. The Cub Scouts, Girls on the Run, the Leukemia Walk on the Mall, Sons of Italy ... come to think of it, the Sons of Italy have waaaay too many men. And just about all of them are white.
I will go propose some targeted legislation !
Anonymous wrote:Our family is not a big donor, so really no skin in the game. That said, is any one concerned states are overreaching into private schools?
How can a state mandate a private universities admissions process? What’s next? Making private universities be non-religious? Or making sure a private school accepts so many first gen students?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our family is not a big donor, so really no skin in the game. That said, is any one concerned states are overreaching into private schools?
How can a state mandate a private universities admissions process? What’s next? Making private universities be non-religious? Or making sure a private school accepts so many first gen students?
This.
This is huge overreach by the state and social engineering in a private entity.
A private entity that gets tax exemption status and government funds.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good for Phil Ting for carrying this legislation, CA voters for voting for it, and Gov Newsom for signing it. USC (which has the highest number of legacy admissions, followed by Stanford) said they would comply with the new law.
https://www.politico.com/news/2024/09/30/california-bans-legacy-admissions-colleges-00181655
USC and Stanford will comply.
It will be embarrassing to be the lone private institution in CA not complying with the law.
It is really a stupid law.
No one cares if a walmart grandkid gets a spot as long as the walmart offspring donates a new gym to their alma mater.
Once again, California leads the way on stupid.
The WalMart grandkids are still getting in because of the building donation. Legacy status is irrelevant to that.
Regular legacy kids don’t get that much of a boost these days.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Serious question. Why would an alumn give money to his/her school if there is no way it will help your child even in some small way don’t the road? Isn’t this going to kill alumni giving?.
Ask Amherst. I’ve also been curious about this.
Okay now I was curious so I went back and looked….Amherst eliminated legacy in 2021
In 2020 annual fund donations were a little over 11M with 44% participation. Looks like FY18 were 10.7M
For FY24, annual fund donations were 9.1M with 35% participation.
So looks like a relatively small decrease — total operating expenses for the year are over 200M so alumni donations seem to be a relatively small percentage (although maybe the big donations go into a different bucket?).
TLDR: the schools have such large endowments that they don’t actually care about the alumni donations that much.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Serious question. Why would an alumn give money to his/her school if there is no way it will help your child even in some small way don’t the road? Isn’t this going to kill alumni giving?.
Ask Amherst. I’ve also been curious about this.
In fact, [Johns] Hopkins’ Phillips says the university did not see a decline in donations after removing legacy consideration.