Anonymous wrote:So does my white son have an easier or harder time getting into UVA today?
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.
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
UVA and most large public flagships have always looked for geographic diversity. Are you just learning this?
Anonymous wrote:So does my white son have an easier or harder time getting into UVA today?
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.
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
Now that the law has changed, Miyares can start investigating and Youngkin appointees can start firing
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/
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
Right. And good for UVA.
It’s not like all these Asians who haven’t been getting in (because other Asians have been getting in) are suddenly going to get it.
Easy on the anti- Asian rhetoric. Plenty of Asian don’t agree with the SC decision
Anonymous wrote:So does my white son have an easier or harder time getting into UVA today?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So does my white son have an easier or harder time getting into UVA today?
If he looks statistically Asian (CS major from NOVA with 80 AP exams), harder.
If he looks statistically like a good ol’ boy (rural high school in a red county), easier.
hateful creature, you
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So does my white son have an easier or harder time getting into UVA today?
If he looks statistically Asian (CS major from NOVA with 80 AP exams), harder.
If he looks statistically like a good ol’ boy (rural high school in a red county), easier.
Anonymous wrote:So does my white son have an easier or harder time getting into UVA today?
Anonymous wrote:So does my white son have an easier or harder time getting into UVA today?
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