Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Great Native American numbers!
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I believe they have a special program as Dartmouth recognizes it was built on Native American land.
Anonymous wrote:Great Native American numbers!
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Anonymous wrote:Good Latinos are really underrepresented in universities.
Anonymous wrote:Great Native American numbers!
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Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When that happens, IMO, it means they leaned heavily on the National Merit Hispanic Recognition Program designation in apps.
Which seems .. lazy?
Yes but it works
Works how? Plenty of kids claim to be Hispanic who are three generations away from speaking anything but English. Itâs not making Dartmouth more diverse on anything but paper.
Exactly.
It even says on the link
Note: Values do not total 100% as some students report more than one race or ethnicity. Underrepresented Backgrounds include Black or African American, Hispanic or Latinx, and Native or Indigenous students.
So you have Latinas who look like Alexis Bledel, Anya Taylor-Joy and Germans from Argentina.
But that doesnât make them white. Taylor joy was born in Miami and raised in Buenos Aires- sheâs jut a light skin Latina, kinda a natural consequence of colonization an European migration to Argentina
Anya identifies as White.
https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/tv/news/anya-taylor-joy-argentina-queens-gambit-b1810984.html
Anonymous wrote:![]()
Students who chose not to disclose their race doubled from 3.3% to 6.6% (White Students, obvi).
All percentage changes aren't that significant, in my opinion.
https://home.dartmouth.edu/news/2024/09/class-2028#:~:text=Of%20the%201%2C184%20students%20in,all%2Dtime%20high%20for%20Dartmouth.
Anonymous wrote:The class is so small you are talking about very small shifts in the number of kids.
Also not only do you not know the race of the students who didn't disclose (could be white or could be AAPI kids who fear discrimination or multi-racial students who just get tired of having to identify -- people have all kinds of perspectives on this) but also nearly 15% of the class are international students whose race is not included in the demographic breakdown. So it's possible the actual racial diversity of the class is identical to last year or different in a way that you wouldn't expect because the shifts are so small and the class is so small and there are actually quite a few students whose race is not even represented in these numbers.
It looks like a pretty diverse class. I truly don't get why people get so worked up about this unless you personally were rejected by Dartmouth and looking for a reason why that decision was wrong or unfair or whatever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When that happens, IMO, it means they leaned heavily on the National Merit Hispanic Recognition Program designation in apps.
Which seems .. lazy?
Yes but it works
Works how? Plenty of kids claim to be Hispanic who are three generations away from speaking anything but English. Itâs not making Dartmouth more diverse on anything but paper.
Exactly.
It even says on the link
Note: Values do not total 100% as some students report more than one race or ethnicity. Underrepresented Backgrounds include Black or African American, Hispanic or Latinx, and Native or Indigenous students.
So you have Latinas who look like Alexis Bledel, Anya Taylor-Joy and Germans from Argentina.
But that doesnât make them white. Taylor joy was born in Miami and raised in Buenos Aires- sheâs jut a light skin Latina, kinda a natural consequence of colonization an European migration to Argentina
Anonymous wrote:Since Hispanic is merely checking a box, more and more are doing that. All it takes is if someone identifies culturally with being Hispanic.
Not to sound cynical, but if you enjoy Taco Tuesdays every week, you have the right to check the box.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When that happens, IMO, it means they leaned heavily on the National Merit Hispanic Recognition Program designation in apps.
Which seems .. lazy?
Yes but it works
Works how? Plenty of kids claim to be Hispanic who are three generations away from speaking anything but English. Itâs not making Dartmouth more diverse on anything but paper.
Exactly.
It even says on the link
Note: Values do not total 100% as some students report more than one race or ethnicity. Underrepresented Backgrounds include Black or African American, Hispanic or Latinx, and Native or Indigenous students.
So you have Latinas who look like Alexis Bledel, Anya Taylor-Joy and Germans from Argentina.
So you agree it works. Did you seriously think any of these institutions actually valued diversity? Did you think it was just a coincidence that the forms of diversity that most easily lend themselves to being manipulated on paper (racial/gender categorizations) just so happened to also be the forms of diversity that these institutions cared about almost exclusively?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When that happens, IMO, it means they leaned heavily on the National Merit Hispanic Recognition Program designation in apps.
Which seems .. lazy?
Yes but it works
Works how? Plenty of kids claim to be Hispanic who are three generations away from speaking anything but English. Itâs not making Dartmouth more diverse on anything but paper.