Anonymous wrote:DH and I are both black UVA alumni. We will not advise our kids to apply to UVA or any school with a lack of diversity. A welcoming, diverse and supportive community is most important to us.
The SC ruling will result in less diverse campuses by self selection alone.
This has also been my experience.My experience with competitive Asian parents and kids is that they’re just as “racist” and exclusionary as the whites and others they bash. Asians aren’t applauding the SC decision because they’re more morally upright, but because they see a competitive advantage. That’s fine, but let’s just be honest about motivations here.
Anonymous wrote:For those saying they went to UVA in the 90s, your experience is your experience. I appreciate your input but it is 2023. These are different kids raised differently and experienced different times. Please stop comparing. UVA 2023 is not the same as 1991.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So does my white son have an easier or harder time getting into UVA today?
UVA is majority White and Asian. There are only 6% Blacks and 6% Hispanics. Your white son will do just fine just like all the other white men in this country who have been doing great for the past few centuries.
https://www.collegefactual.com/colleges/university-of-virginia-main-campus/student-life/diversity/
Just say it's majority White. Asians only comprise of 15% of the whole student body.
Which is more than 2x their proportion of the population nationally and statewide.
Exactly. And blacks are only 28% of the nation.
Libidiots always leave these pieces of math out.
If you compare the demographics of the state, University of Virginia has about the same or slightly fewer White students than you would expect based on state demographics, nearly double the Asian students you would expect based on state demographics, and only 1/2 of the Black population you would expect. So for all the memorials to the enslaved people who built the universities and gave labor to the founders of the universities and currently pay state taxes that help support the universities, only half as many Black students as there are proportionately in the state get to attend the flagship university.
I am not happy with the SC decision, however I was thinking UVA will most likely have a difficult time to ever match the % of Black students to their population in the state. How many top Black students choose HBCU’s over UVA? How many Black students do not want to attend a “Southern” university? How many Black students are discouraged from even applying to UVA?
I graduated from UVA in 1998 when it was 12% Black. One of the reasons I chose to attend was because the Black population mimicked that of the US. I have no idea why the percentage of Black students has fallen so much since then and it's sad, but I can assure you it's not because more chose to attend an HBCU or didn't want to attend a "Southern" university.
I was a graduate student at UVA in the early 90s. As part of our RA duties we would meet with the professor when he went over the exam grades. It was eye opening to me to see that the bottom 5-10% of the class were almost always black students, and the majority were well below average. These were anonymously graded exams. It became very clear that a large percentage of the black students simply weren’t qualified to be there. I felt sorry for the 25% of the black kids who absolutely belonged there; I’m sure people assumed they were unqualified. Of course UVA, like most “prestigious” schools, graduates almost everyone who gets in, so the majority still earned degrees. I’m curious if this kind of data caused UVA to be a little more careful in who they accepted later on.
I’m curious what kind of program this was. I read an interesting article earlier this year about a white professor who noticed a similar trend in his intro class for a STEM program (I do not remember the specific discipline). What he also discovered was that the few Black students in his class were often left out of study groups formed by their classmates. When he started forming the study groups which included the Black students, there was little to no discernible trend in student performance based on race.
Wow. I didn’t realize that study group formation was limited by race.
Anonymous wrote:with this stat, better to try Harvard instead of UVA
Anonymous wrote:Apply ED from low income zip code and at least a 4.4 gpa = sweet spot to geting into UVA.
Anonymous wrote:My experience with competitive Asian parents and kids is that they’re just as “racist” and exclusionary as the whites and others they bash. Asians aren’t applauding the SC decision because they’re more morally upright, but because they see a competitive advantage. That’s fine, but let’s just be honest about motivations here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So does my white son have an easier or harder time getting into UVA today?
Because that is all I care about.
Just say it.
Isn't pp supposed to care about their child?
Anonymous wrote:Apply ED from low income zip code and at least a 4.4 gpa = sweet spot to geting into UVA.
Anonymous wrote:Apply ED from low income zip code and at least a 4.4 gpa = sweet spot to geting into UVA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So does my white son have an easier or harder time getting into UVA today?
If you are full pay you have a strong chance. I’m pretty torn by SC decision. I do believe underrepresented groups should be given an opportunity. Many attend poor school districts where the level of instruction does not set them up to meet competitive admissions metrics. But as a parent of an OS white son who was waitlisted this year (1560 SAT, 4.61 WGPA), I know it was the fact we could only contribute maybe $35000-$40000 was the reason he was waitlisted over others. So I was disappointed for him at the time but we’ve moved on.
Anonymous wrote:For those saying they went to UVA in the 90s, your experience is your experience. I appreciate your input but it is 2023. These are different kids raised differently and experienced different times. Please stop comparing. UVA 2023 is not the same as 1991.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is what's coming next:
"The University of Virginia, for example, announced a plan this month to target 40 high schools in eight regions of the state that had little history of sending applicants."
New York Times article, 6/30
This is good, as long as they select the top students from these under represented schools instead of using race as a determining factor.
Because we know nothing statistically about who lives in various geographies… zip codes will soon be quotas too.
Surely you don’t believe this. UVA knows the demographic makeup of every zip code in the state.
My zip code has affordable housing/projects and multi-million home/condos. My kids school was 20% Farms. So how do they know which kid they are getting ?
Seriously? They have your address. The school can figure everything out about your family with a six second google search.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is what's coming next:
"The University of Virginia, for example, announced a plan this month to target 40 high schools in eight regions of the state that had little history of sending applicants."
New York Times article, 6/30
This is good, as long as they select the top students from these under represented schools instead of using race as a determining factor.
Because we know nothing statistically about who lives in various geographies… zip codes will soon be quotas too.
Surely you don’t believe this. UVA knows the demographic makeup of every zip code in the state.
My zip code has affordable housing/projects and multi-million home/condos. My kids school was 20% Farms. So how do they know which kid they are getting ?