Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yale committee concludes that colleges and universities have completely lost the plot:
“High costs, murky admissions practices, uneven academic standards and fears about free speech on campuses, the committee said, are among the reasons for widening discontent over higher education’s worthiness.
The findings reflect misgivings that Americans have described across years of polling and interviews. But the report, from a 10-professor panel at one of the nation’s most renowned universities, amounts to a damning depiction of academia’s role in cultivating the political and cultural forces that are reshaping higher education’s place in American life.”
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/15/us/yale-report-colleges-unversities-trust.html?unlocked_article_code=1.bVA._ebw.-PVgolGZ4r5r&smid=url-share
Your landscaper could have told you this.
Any FOX viewer could have told you this.
Hopefully they’re not patting themselves on the back about these conclusions.
Anonymous wrote:Yale committee concludes that colleges and universities have completely lost the plot:
“High costs, murky admissions practices, uneven academic standards and fears about free speech on campuses, the committee said, are among the reasons for widening discontent over higher education’s worthiness.
The findings reflect misgivings that Americans have described across years of polling and interviews. But the report, from a 10-professor panel at one of the nation’s most renowned universities, amounts to a damning depiction of academia’s role in cultivating the political and cultural forces that are reshaping higher education’s place in American life.”
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/15/us/yale-report-colleges-unversities-trust.html?unlocked_article_code=1.bVA._ebw.-PVgolGZ4r5r&smid=url-share
Anonymous wrote:Focusing on the private school % is a red herring. Those kids would just go to a top affluent public school if all privates were ordered to shut down. And I am confident that the international students are almost entirely privately educated in their respective home countries, which further distorts the picture. Because if you look at the other end, at the actual private schools, your typical high performing day school sends fewer kids to Ivies than 25 years ago, even if SATs and other academic metrics remain high. All the privates complain now how much harder it is to get kids into elite colleges.
I wish Yale best of luck. This report is a bit courageous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Geniuses at Yale finally figured it out. LMFAO
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Geniuses at Yale have figured out how to proactively stay out of Trump's crosshairs.
I dont know why they've been spared, but they've had very little impact by the cuts at other universities and they'd be smart to get at least some of that out to students or the community. and release reports about guarding free speech
They have not been entirely spared. None of us have been spared in this entire country.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The most overrepresented student at Yale is the private school graduate. By far. That will NEVER change.
I would not be so sure.
“When selective admissions seem so inexplicable — or, worse, tilted in ways that benefit the already advantaged — it should come as no surprise that many Americans do not trust the process,” the committee wrote.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Geniuses at Yale finally figured it out. LMFAO
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Geniuses at Yale have figured out how to proactively stay out of Trump's crosshairs.
I dont know why they've been spared, but they've had very little impact by the cuts at other universities and they'd be smart to get at least some of that out to students or the community. and release reports about guarding free speech
Anonymous wrote:Geniuses at Yale finally figured it out. LMFAO
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Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Interesting.
"The committee offered dozens of recommendations, like expanding financial aid, reducing admissions preferences, zealously protecting free speech and adjusting grading policies."
So, they have identified the things that make it messed up and the want to recommend doing more of those? Ok.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Interesting.
"The committee offered dozens of recommendations, like expanding financial aid, reducing admissions preferences, zealously protecting free speech and adjusting grading policies."
So, they have identified the things that make it messed up and the want to recommend doing more of those? Ok.
Anonymous wrote:Interesting.
"The committee offered dozens of recommendations, like expanding financial aid, reducing admissions preferences, zealously protecting free speech and adjusting grading policies."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The most overrepresented student at Yale is the private school graduate. By far. That will NEVER change.
64% of matriculants came from public high schools.
36% of matriculants came from independent day, boarding, and religious schools.
when you say "by far" what does that mean?
I just looked up Swarthmore they have almost exactly the same breakdown 36 percent independent/religious…