Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lol … college admissions was more meritocratic when men didn’t have to compete with anyone.
Oh lol that’s hilarious.
Men didn’t have to compete with anyone in 1996? In 2003? What?
The pool of candidates was smaller and less widely dispersed. The pool from which you drew applicants was just smaller for a host of reasons.
And that was a good thing. No, it wasn’t discriminatory at that point. The kids who applied were serious students who carefully curated their application lists.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, the days when the HoS could call a contact in admissions and put in a word where much more meritocratic
Anonymous wrote:I agree with you. Gen X, HS class of 94, literally no one even took SAT prep classes at my school. I had an F in Algebra and had to retake it and was waitlisted at UVA.
Anonymous wrote:I’m not sure the factors you list create more meritocracy but the overall level of achievement is markedly higher today than back then. Whatever grade inflation and SAT scoring you want to cite, students are taking more advanced courses sooner than ever before. They’re just smarter than we ever were.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lol … college admissions was more meritocratic when men didn’t have to compete with anyone.
Oh lol that’s hilarious.
Men didn’t have to compete with anyone in 1996? In 2003? What?
The pool of candidates was smaller and less widely dispersed. The pool from which you drew applicants was just smaller for a host of reasons.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m not sure the factors you list create more meritocracy but the overall level of achievement is markedly higher today than back then. Whatever grade inflation and SAT scoring you want to cite, students are taking more advanced courses sooner than ever before. They’re just smarter than we ever were.
College professor here. I disagree completely. I can tell you that students’ performance in recent years has plummeted and that the overall quality is far lower than in the time period to which OP referred. Grade inflation and test score inflation mask what is really going on. The quality of education in this country has declined significantly.
Ok “professor”. I’m more apt to believe you’re the OP.
I’m sure Jeff can confirm I am not, but you are free to remain incredulous that you might be wrong. I am indeed a college professor and what I described is a well-established problem across universities.
Oh, Jeff can confirm that you are not? That statement makes me even less likely to believe you.
You sound unhinged.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m not sure the factors you list create more meritocracy but the overall level of achievement is markedly higher today than back then. Whatever grade inflation and SAT scoring you want to cite, students are taking more advanced courses sooner than ever before. They’re just smarter than we ever were.
College professor here. I disagree completely. I can tell you that students’ performance in recent years has plummeted and that the overall quality is far lower than in the time period to which OP referred. Grade inflation and test score inflation mask what is really going on. The quality of education in this country has declined significantly.
Ok “professor”. I’m more apt to believe you’re the OP.
I’m sure Jeff can confirm I am not, but you are free to remain incredulous that you might be wrong. I am indeed a college professor and what I described is a well-established problem across universities.
Oh, Jeff can confirm that you are not? That statement makes me even less likely to believe you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m not sure the factors you list create more meritocracy but the overall level of achievement is markedly higher today than back then. Whatever grade inflation and SAT scoring you want to cite, students are taking more advanced courses sooner than ever before. They’re just smarter than we ever were.
College professor here. I disagree completely. I can tell you that students’ performance in recent years has plummeted and that the overall quality is far lower than in the time period to which OP referred. Grade inflation and test score inflation mask what is really going on. The quality of education in this country has declined significantly.
Ok “professor”. I’m more apt to believe you’re the OP.
I’m sure Jeff can confirm I am not, but you are free to remain incredulous that you might be wrong. I am indeed a college professor and what I described is a well-established problem across universities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lol … college admissions was more meritocratic when men didn’t have to compete with anyone.
Oh lol that’s hilarious.
Men didn’t have to compete with anyone in 1996? In 2003? What?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m not sure the factors you list create more meritocracy but the overall level of achievement is markedly higher today than back then. Whatever grade inflation and SAT scoring you want to cite, students are taking more advanced courses sooner than ever before. They’re just smarter than we ever were.
Disagree. The “advanced” classes are easier than the “regular” classes of yesteryear. Heck, in many schools, particularly open-enrollment public high schools, there are no “regular” classes, every class is somehow “honors” or higher. Lots of kids taking AP exams and failing them. That is unfortunate as I think it’s better to take one AP exam, study really well for it, and get a 5 than take four AP exams in one month and get 3’s on all of them. Quality over quantity is not in vogue.
Anonymous wrote:Lol … college admissions was more meritocratic when men didn’t have to compete with anyone.
Oh lol that’s hilarious.