Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't have a problem. I think it's great that a board at an institution who has been successful for 400 years is asking the questions.
You still haven't provided a link proving that it is asking questions.
Anonymous wrote:I don't have a problem. I think it's great that a board at an institution who has been successful for 400 years is asking the questions.
Anonymous wrote:No one stays on top without giving thought to how they can best change for the better. They do a good job on the financial end. It is on points 2 and 3 that they can lead the way to a merit based system that still takes into account ECs in addition to academic record yet eliminate the buckets of legacy, URM, sports and connections. Under the current structure of admissions, the institution who is supposedly the best in the world is sending a message to kids that their academic efforts don't really matter. It's more important that you are born to the right family, who you know or that you're a fast runner. We have work places and pro sport teams for that. Alumni kids should not be afraid of the competition they are well equipped for through nature and nurture. People talk about having access to the 1%. Why...are kids only capable of succeeding through other people whose parents did the heavy lifting? I know too idealistic here but I think college should be idealistic because they are dealing with formative years and leave the professional aspects to graduate schools.
Anonymous wrote:No one stays on top without giving thought to how they can best change for the better. They do a good job on the financial end. It is on points 2 and 3 that they can lead the way to a merit based system that still takes into account ECs in addition to academic record yet eliminate the buckets of legacy, URM, sports and connections. Under the current structure of admissions, the institution who is supposedly the best in the world is sending a message to kids that their academic efforts don't really matter. It's more important that you are born to the right family, who you know or that you're a fast runner. We have work places and pro sport teams for that. Alumni kids should not be afraid of the competition they are well equipped for through nature and nurture. People talk about having access to the 1%. Why...are kids only capable of succeeding through other people whose parents did the heavy lifting? I know too idealistic here but I think college should be idealistic because they are dealing with formative years and leave the professional aspects to graduate schools.
Anonymous wrote:No one stays on top without giving thought to how they can best change for the better. They do a good job on the financial end. It is on points 2 and 3 that they can lead the way to a merit based system that still takes into account ECs in addition to academic record yet eliminate the buckets of legacy, URM, sports and connections. Under the current structure of admissions, the institution who is supposedly the best in the world is sending a message to kids that their academic efforts don't really matter. It's more important that you are born to the right family, who you know or that you're a fast runner. We have work places and pro sport teams for that. Alumni kids should not be afraid of the competition they are well equipped for through nature and nurture. People talk about having access to the 1%. Why...are kids only capable of succeeding through other people whose parents did the heavy lifting? I know too idealistic here but I think college should be idealistic because they are dealing with formative years and leave the professional aspects to graduate schools.
Anonymous wrote:
There is an effort afoot to elect to Harvard's Board of Overseers a slate that believes in (1) free tuition for all Harvard undergrads (because the endowment is large enough to afford it); (2) greater transparency in admissions (so that special perks don't go to alumni kids); and (3) strict enforcement of the principle of nondiscrimination so that there is not necessarily a cap for diversity reasons on Asian applicants.
If Harvard does it, others will follow. The same could apply to private high schools.
The obvious downside is that some who can easily afford to pay are given a free ride. That upside is that it creates competition to compete for the best.
Thoughts? Could this be the beginning of the end for high tuition costs at the top colleges and private high schools?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, I don't believe most other schools will follow because they don't have the endowment to afford it so it will only put the other schools in more dire straights as they try to keep up and can't.
They don't need to try to keep up. Is Harvard intending to quadruple the size of its freshmen class? Harvard being free changes almost nothing for other colleges. It already has only a handful of competitors--all of whom offer great financial aid to lower and middle income students. It is not lack of tuition assistance that keeps middle America out of Harvard.
Anonymous wrote:No, I don't believe most other schools will follow because they don't have the endowment to afford it so it will only put the other schools in more dire straights as they try to keep up and can't.