Yet, you have no problem insulting others. Your self-righteousness falls on deaf ears.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Take it any way you want, twist and distort any way you want. I could care less. Bottom line is that the holistic method works and affords an opportunity to those who would never get a shot IF used properly.Anonymous wrote:^ there are literally hundreds of these accepts/rejects posts on CC. not sure if hand-picking 3 examples to fit your point proves anything.
You can victimize all you want but the bottom line is that there are just so many seats, no one race is getting all of them, and I applaud the holistic approach. Otherwise the Asian student would not have been accepted over other Asians with PERFECT scores of which there are many.
Finished.
I hope the Asians now attending Ivies get involved with activities. I went to an Ivy with lots of Asians but most contributed very little to the campus atmosphere. All most did was study. A few were better assimilated and actually got involved with things, but most might as well have taken distance-learning classes.
And how many Asians did you actually hang out with? I went to an Ivy in a very elite program where three quarter were Asians. No one was involved in a lousy fraternity where people drank too much, but we did all sorts of activities ranging from business associations to women's groups to acapella groups. Now we are all top finance/law/start up/hedge fund professionals. Do we threaten you?
You bored me then, and it sounds like you're just as boring now. Please don't try to ruin our schools - and, yes, our ancestors founded them, not yours - any more than you have already. I'm sure there are schools in China where you can learn to code, hack websites, and short mortgage bonds.
Sorry vague insults like that are beneath my time. However racism is a good look for you, keep wearing it as you fade into irrelevance.
Anonymous wrote:lol are you serious
Even ivies are motivated by getting more money
Who do you think donates the most to the schools..... follow the money
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think most Asians would object to SES-based A Action admission policy. It's the skin color based admission policy that gives me heartburn.
Me too. And I say this an underrepresented minority parent, so I'm not just some butthurt white person. I am uncomfortable with the fact that my children, whose parents are lawyers and make lots of money and can afford to live in a great school district, have kids play sports/do lessons/travel/be tutored/etc. and basically have every advantage that comes along with being affluent in the US get a boost in college admissions as opposed to say, the poor rural white kid, simply because of their ethnicity.
I am all for SES based affirmative action, but do not agree with race-based.
Granted my oldest is only entering 9th grade next year, so I have some time to ponder this.
The poor white kid has a great advantage in life if he's not stating at a screen with z pretend social life on it and being ferried to canned/staged activities all the time. Odds are the poor white kid will have s job early on too. The poor white kid will have better social and problem solving skills and perhaps mental health even (if he had a happy non abusive childhood despite being poor).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think most Asians would object to SES-based A Action admission policy. It's the skin color based admission policy that gives me heartburn.
Me too. And I say this an underrepresented minority parent, so I'm not just some butthurt white person. I am uncomfortable with the fact that my children, whose parents are lawyers and make lots of money and can afford to live in a great school district, have kids play sports/do lessons/travel/be tutored/etc. and basically have every advantage that comes along with being affluent in the US get a boost in college admissions as opposed to say, the poor rural white kid, simply because of their ethnicity.
I am all for SES based affirmative action, but do not agree with race-based.
Granted my oldest is only entering 9th grade next year, so I have some time to ponder this.
Anonymous wrote:Holistic admissions is just a palatable way to justify discrimination.Anonymous wrote:I'll be even more blunt
This isn't Korea or China or India
The score on your test isn't what matters most here
Harvard could take all perfect SAT scores if they wanted.... but they don't
HOLISTIC Admissions
Anonymous wrote:I'm white and I saw this this morning
http://www.vox.com/2016/5/22/11704756/affirmative-action-merit
Really opened my eyes on some stuff
Still think holistic admissions is the way to go
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I posted earlier and I wasn't suggesting that Asians were not creative, etc. My point is that they SOMETIMES have the same interests, same majors, etc. Differentiation is key for all races.
This. I just went to a middle school band and string concert. 90% of the violin players are Asian. Less than 50% of the other strings players are Asian. 10% of the band students are Asian (and they all play the flute). Why strings vs band (and especially violin)? And why only the flute? No idea. To me, playing a musical instrument is important, but I let my kids choose which one. I've never seen that a violin has more intrinsic value than a cello or a clarinet. But for some reason that is how the Asian kids in DC's school tracks. And since this school feeds TJ, believe that 80% of the Asian kids are developing a deep passion for STEM. Also, fine, but colleges need literature majors too. I have no problem with colleges having lots of qualified Asian students. I do have a problem if 80% of the student body consists of violin playing STEM students-- especially if those students have no real passion for STEM or the violin. Asian cultures often value homogeny. American colleges place an emphasis on diverse backgrounds and experiences. An Asian parent who wants to send a kid to Yale might do well to let their child pursue genuine interests, especially if they are unique and different.
Agree!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let me get this straight:
- some white people complain that there are too many Asian Americans in universities
- some white people complain that African Americans only get into elite universities because of affirmative action
- some white people complain that Hispanics are taking their jobs
Is there any group of people that white people don't complain about taking from them?
It's the Asian Americans filing the complaint correct? Not the white, black or Hispanic groups. It's the Asian Americans complaint that this thread is focused.