Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would there be less rape at UVa and other party schools if they admitted people based on academic merit and not "well-roundedness" (code for sports, children of white alums)?
There certainly would be less rape/sexual assaults with less legacies and jock/fraternity types with entitlement attitude admitted to the university.
But who's to say what might replace it. Spoiled kids with little moral compass tend to be universal phenomenon.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/11/26/AR2007112602043.html
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would there be less rape at UVa and other party schools if they admitted people based on academic merit and not "well-roundedness" (code for sports, children of white alums)?
There certainly would be less rape/sexual assaults with less legacies and jock/fraternity types with entitlement attitude admitted to the university.
Anonymous wrote:Would there be less rape at UVa and other party schools if they admitted people based on academic merit and not "well-roundedness" (code for sports, children of white alums)?
Anonymous wrote:Would there be less rape at UVa and other party schools if they admitted people based on academic merit and not "well-roundedness" (code for sports, children of white alums)?
Anonymous wrote:"Here in the US, Stuyvesant High School is a true meritocracy. Twenty-eight thousand New York City 8th graders sit for an SAT-like test, and the top 800 scorers are admitted (about a 3% acceptance rate). Admission is based upon ONE quantifiable criteria — test scores. Transcripts, course rigor, GPA, teacher recommendations, essays and extracurricular’s ARE NOT considered.
Fifty-years ago, Stuyvesant was 70% Jewish. Now the school is 70% Asian. Does the educational system at Stuyvesant suffer by admitting just the top test scorers? Does the orchestra suffer by admitting just the top test scorers? Do the athletic teams suffer by admitting just the top test scorers? Does the debate team, robotics team, drama society suffer by admitting just the top test scorers? Having two kids recently graduate from the school, the answer is absolutely not! It works at Stuy; it could work at Harvard or any other college for that matter. (In fact, it has worked quite successfully in the California State College system.) But, most US private and public colleges want to control the mix of students who are admitted."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Top private universities receive more public funds than public universities.
Source? And is that more $$$ per student, or more $$$ overall.
"Harvard, Princeton, Yale -- and all the other members of the Ivy League, for that matter -- were also given 5 to 8 times the median to pay their students in work-study jobs. That is money the institutions got directly, to be spent on behalf of needy students.
And they got 5 to 20 times the median amount of grant money to look after the everyday needs of their poor students, despite having some of the largest endowments in the nation, if not the world. (Harvard and Yale both have endowments of more than $10 billion. Princeton's is $8.7 billion.)
Such disparities have been a sore point among universities for years, leftovers from an era when federal money was given to colleges on an individual, almost negotiable basis. Now, for the first time in more than two decades, the nation's financial aid officers are calling for the imbalances to be wiped away, replaced by a system that steers financial aid toward the universities that poor students actually attend, rather than those with the biggest reputations."
http://www.nytimes.com/2003/11/09/us/rich-colleges-receiving-richest-share-of-us-aid.html
The above is just financial aid funds. My guess is that federal research funds distribution would be even worse between major private universities and major public universities.
Yes, but research funding is generally for graduate school. Graduate school admission for research degrees is IMO much more of a meritocracy. Professors want the best students they can exploit for 5-7 years.
Yes research funding is generally for graduate schools but the point is that the private universities receive not only vastly more federal aid money but also vastly more federal research money as institutions.
This point is made to respond to various comment
s that say private universities (as opposed to public universities) should do what ever they want to do since they do not receive public funds.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Top private universities receive more public funds than public universities.
Source? And is that more $$$ per student, or more $$$ overall.
"Harvard, Princeton, Yale -- and all the other members of the Ivy League, for that matter -- were also given 5 to 8 times the median to pay their students in work-study jobs. That is money the institutions got directly, to be spent on behalf of needy students.
And they got 5 to 20 times the median amount of grant money to look after the everyday needs of their poor students, despite having some of the largest endowments in the nation, if not the world. (Harvard and Yale both have endowments of more than $10 billion. Princeton's is $8.7 billion.)
Such disparities have been a sore point among universities for years, leftovers from an era when federal money was given to colleges on an individual, almost negotiable basis. Now, for the first time in more than two decades, the nation's financial aid officers are calling for the imbalances to be wiped away, replaced by a system that steers financial aid toward the universities that poor students actually attend, rather than those with the biggest reputations."
http://www.nytimes.com/2003/11/09/us/rich-colleges-receiving-richest-share-of-us-aid.html
The above is just financial aid funds. My guess is that federal research funds distribution would be even worse between major private universities and major public universities.
Yes, but research funding is generally for graduate school. Graduate school admission for research degrees is IMO much more of a meritocracy. Professors want the best students they can exploit for 5-7 years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Top private universities receive more public funds than public universities.
Source? And is that more $$$ per student, or more $$$ overall.
"Harvard, Princeton, Yale -- and all the other members of the Ivy League, for that matter -- were also given 5 to 8 times the median to pay their students in work-study jobs. That is money the institutions got directly, to be spent on behalf of needy students.
And they got 5 to 20 times the median amount of grant money to look after the everyday needs of their poor students, despite having some of the largest endowments in the nation, if not the world. (Harvard and Yale both have endowments of more than $10 billion. Princeton's is $8.7 billion.)
Such disparities have been a sore point among universities for years, leftovers from an era when federal money was given to colleges on an individual, almost negotiable basis. Now, for the first time in more than two decades, the nation's financial aid officers are calling for the imbalances to be wiped away, replaced by a system that steers financial aid toward the universities that poor students actually attend, rather than those with the biggest reputations."
http://www.nytimes.com/2003/11/09/us/rich-colleges-receiving-richest-share-of-us-aid.html
The above is just financial aid funds. My guess is that federal research funds distribution would be even worse between major private universities and major public universities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Top private universities receive more public funds than public universities.
Source? And is that more $$$ per student, or more $$$ overall.
Anonymous wrote:Top private universities receive more public funds than public universities.