Anonymous wrote:I hope this shakes out into the workplace too.
Anonymous wrote:Or even neutral ideas around science. Remember when conservatives were the "anti-science" party? Science and math are now out the window at these schools.
Anonymous wrote:Students attend college for an education and preparation for a career. They’re not part of some absurd social experiment and if any of you have children in college the amount of self segregation amongst minority groups lays bare the myth of diversity as an enhancement to the overall experience. If you spent half as much time instilling positive values in your children as you do whining about diversity perhaps your children wouldn’t need affirmative action to attend a competitive college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Higher education shoud be mainly for acedemic merit and must be color blind.
Actually, higher education is about far more than just academics.
If they go color-blind, they could still build diversity based on geographic location.
If they get rid of AA, will they also eliminate preferences based on legacy status?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Higher education shoud be mainly for acedemic merit and must be color blind.
Actually, higher education is about far more than just academics.
If they go color-blind, they could still build diversity based on geographic location.
If they get rid of AA, will they also eliminate preferences based on legacy status?
Anonymous wrote:Or even neutral ideas around science. Remember when conservatives were the "anti-science" party? Science and math are now out the window at these schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So will it help white male applicants? Especially low income? I have a horse in this race lol
Not at most universities. It’s currently a huge advantage to be male at most schools so males may lose their preferential treatment. There are exceptions.
It’s the first time I hear about the advantage of being male, unless it’s a liberal arts school
From Georgetown’s website “The Wall Street Journal recently highlighted the shifting representation of men and women on U.S. college campuses, pointing out that men accounted for 71 percent of the overall enrollment decline across the last five years—and 78 percent of pandemic-related drop-outs. As of spring 2021, women made up 59.5 percent of all U.S. college students, a record high.” But women have been majority of college students for past forty years. One factor is the greater availability of well-paying jobs not requiring a degree that are traditionally male or currently male-dominated (including the trades). While traditionally female jobs like teaching and nursing can be lower paid but still require degrees.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How will this affect universities trying for gender parity? Eg 39,000 female applicants and 22,000 make applicants but they admit males at higher rate to have a near 50-50 class?
Depends on how narrow or wide the SC rules against affirmative action.
Forgot to add that Noah Feldman (Harvard Law) addressed this:
Universities would no longer be allowed to pursue racial diversity, gender diversity, sexual orientation diversity or religious diversity. (They would still be allowed to pursue economic diversity, class diversity, viewpoint diversity and geographic diversity, because these categories aren’t protected against discrimination by the Constitution or civil rights laws.) https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/supreme-court-will-end-the-era-of-college-diversity/2022/10/16/4716c656-4d53-11ed-ada8-04e6e6bf8b19_story.html
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Higher education shoud be mainly for acedemic merit and must be color blind.
I suppose your definition of merit is whatever your kid does well?
Also, this whole premise is wrong. Higher education should be about education. Diversity is a part of education.
Diversity is not part of school education - it is part of education at home.
Where did these insane ideas come from?
It absolutely is a part of higher ed. The whole point is that individual homes have limited breadth, and gathering at a higher ed institution fosters greater breadth of ideas, in part through diversity.