Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Liberal/Leftist
Disparity equals discrimination. To prove discrimination you just have to show disparity between POC outcomes and white outcomes. That provides prima facie evidence of discrimination (Voting rights, criminal justice and many other categories)
Me:
Hmm, so what about the consistent disparity in personality scores given by Harvard to Asians compared to other races? (The district court found quote, ‘a statistically significant and negative relationship between Asian American identity and the personal rating assigned by Harvard admissions officers.’)
Liberal: (Read Waxman, Harvard lawyer) "the record will not allow a full explanation for that." .... "But we don't discriminate"
Such duplicity. Such Hypocrisy.
This one is hard because it's an opinion. They may have truly thought the applicant wasn't a good fit or they may have used it to reduce the numbers. Hard to say with the data presented. If there was a more concrete measure it would be easier to link to discrimination.
Anonymous wrote:Liberal/Leftist
Disparity equals discrimination. To prove discrimination you just have to show disparity between POC outcomes and white outcomes. That provides prima facie evidence of discrimination (Voting rights, criminal justice and many other categories)
Me:
Hmm, so what about the consistent disparity in personality scores given by Harvard to Asians compared to other races? (The district court found quote, ‘a statistically significant and negative relationship between Asian American identity and the personal rating assigned by Harvard admissions officers.’)
Liberal: (Read Waxman, Harvard lawyer) "the record will not allow a full explanation for that." .... "But we don't discriminate"
Such duplicity. Such Hypocrisy.
Anonymous wrote:But if they can't blame URMs, who will DCUM point the finger at for taking their kids' spots at Harvard?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Higher education shoud be mainly for acedemic merit and must be color blind.
"Of 35,000 applicants competing for 1,600 spots in the class of 2019, 2,700 had perfect verbal SAT scores; 3,400 had perfect math SAT scores; more than 8,000 had perfect GPAs."
From the facts in the actual case. Now what?
But that are the scores of the applicants. What are the verbal SAT, math SAT, and GPA of the admitted students?
Why does that matter. Harvard would not be able to fill its seats based merely on a formula on "objective" scores like SAT scores or GPA. If they only considered perfect GPA or perfect SAT scores or whatever, they would still have to choose between applicants to fill their class. And they, as a private institution, should be able to decide that these scores are not what they are looking for in a student body. They have determined that their formula for selecting Harvard students tries to suss out potential to make an impact in some way or the other. They may be wrong. And if they are wrong, their brand value will go down. Let the market determine if their strategy is successful or not.
It matters because Harvard admitted students with very low scores in the name of R
Why can't Harvard admit students who have low test scores or no test scores at all?
They can as long as they don't discriminate against race
And the courts have found that they do not.
Sorry we have Supreme Court going on right now.
It's called 'Supreme' for a reason.
Yes, they are deciding whether or not to change decided precedent. That means these schools followed the law as it was, which is what the lower courts found. But now, this new Supreme Court may decided to change the established law (even though they aren't supposed to do that). I would not anticipate a retroactive application of it if they do change the law though.
Nope, they don't change the law.
Law makers change the law.
Yes, they do. When the overturn settled precedent, they are changing the law.
No, they can overturn precedent because it violates Constitution.
It's not making law.
And when that happens and there are no people of certain races admitted to elite colleges, then they sue, and win, (because that is absolute proof of systemic societal racism) what happens then?
No it's not absolute proof of systemic societal racism.
NBA has only 0.4% of Asians.
Is that absolute proof of systemic societal racism?
The NBA argument? Really? That's all you got?
Dumbest argument ever.
Try again.
I'm interested. Why NBA shouldn't be diverse to reflect population?
No, you are humping a strawman which is entirely irrelevant for reasons you absolutely know, and I won't engage to allow you to gish gallop past the relevant point. Stop being pathetic. Try yet again.
Nope, PP has a very relevant point. Why is there a severe lack of diversity in a billion dollar industry like the NBA? Hardly any Hispanics, Asians, etc. Why is the NBA exempt from diversity that reflects the country?
Oh that's right, because the NBA only wants the best players based on their merits regardless of their race. Funny how that works in a billion dollars sports industry, yet we don't apply the same logic at universities.
Sigh. Go ahead, join in on the stupid.
There have been many instances of racism in employment in professional sports throughout history. Maybe you've heard of Jackie Robinson?
Stupid, stupid argument. Please don't make this point where people know who you are. I tell you this for your own good.
Yes racism is bad.
Also it's not absolute proof of systemic societal racism just because a certain race is severely underrepresented.
Is a diverse class important? That is subjective. In Harvard's view, it is valuable. It is not against the law to believe this is an important attribute of a class. If they need to change their criteria to achieve that, ok.
You think the highest test scores are the most valuable criteria but that is also subjective.
Agreed. They will find another way to get the diversity they seek.
They better find a way to be more careful or they'll just lose the next lawsuit too,
Diversity is not against the law
Using race in admissions is about to be
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Prediction: Black SAT scores rise discontinuously in 2023.
Prediction: test optional becomes the norm in 2023 and SAT scores become even LESS relevant.
A lot of students won't take the SAT/ ACT.
Totally wrong.
Most students will take the test multiple times, and if scores are low, then hide it.
The SAT will become less relevant. Already headed in that direction ( posters citing MIT won't change that).
The UMC whites and Asians will spend on test prep and take the test multiple times. Most URMs and/or first gens will not. And they'll still get accepted because of their academic profile , ECs and essays AND for diversity.
Not much will change. The elite colleges will still fill their classes the way they want.
Why would most URMs pass the good chance to see if they also get high score and use it??????????????
Anonymous wrote:But if they can't blame URMs, who will DCUM point the finger at for taking their kids' spots at Harvard?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Prediction: Black SAT scores rise discontinuously in 2023.
Prediction: test optional becomes the norm in 2023 and SAT scores become even LESS relevant.
A lot of students won't take the SAT/ ACT.
Totally wrong.
Most students will take the test multiple times, and if scores are low, then hide it.
The SAT will become less relevant. Already headed in that direction ( posters citing MIT won't change that).
The UMC whites and Asians will spend on test prep and take the test multiple times. Most URMs and/or first gens will not. And they'll still get accepted because of their academic profile , ECs and essays AND for diversity.
Not much will change. The elite colleges will still fill their classes the way they want.
Why would most URMs pass the good chance to see if they also get high score and use it??????????????
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Prediction: Black SAT scores rise discontinuously in 2023.
Prediction: test optional becomes the norm in 2023 and SAT scores become even LESS relevant.
A lot of students won't take the SAT/ ACT.
Totally wrong.
Most students will take the test multiple times, and if scores are low, then hide it.
The SAT will become less relevant. Already headed in that direction ( posters citing MIT won't change that).
The UMC whites and Asians will spend on test prep and take the test multiple times. Most URMs and/or first gens will not. And they'll still get accepted because of their academic profile , ECs and essays AND for diversity.
Not much will change. The elite colleges will still fill their classes the way they want.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Higher education shoud be mainly for acedemic merit and must be color blind.
"Of 35,000 applicants competing for 1,600 spots in the class of 2019, 2,700 had perfect verbal SAT scores; 3,400 had perfect math SAT scores; more than 8,000 had perfect GPAs."
From the facts in the actual case. Now what?
But that are the scores of the applicants. What are the verbal SAT, math SAT, and GPA of the admitted students?
Why does that matter. Harvard would not be able to fill its seats based merely on a formula on "objective" scores like SAT scores or GPA. If they only considered perfect GPA or perfect SAT scores or whatever, they would still have to choose between applicants to fill their class. And they, as a private institution, should be able to decide that these scores are not what they are looking for in a student body. They have determined that their formula for selecting Harvard students tries to suss out potential to make an impact in some way or the other. They may be wrong. And if they are wrong, their brand value will go down. Let the market determine if their strategy is successful or not.
It matters because Harvard admitted students with very low scores in the name of R
Why can't Harvard admit students who have low test scores or no test scores at all?
They can as long as they don't discriminate against race
And the courts have found that they do not.
Sorry we have Supreme Court going on right now.
It's called 'Supreme' for a reason.
Yes, they are deciding whether or not to change decided precedent. That means these schools followed the law as it was, which is what the lower courts found. But now, this new Supreme Court may decided to change the established law (even though they aren't supposed to do that). I would not anticipate a retroactive application of it if they do change the law though.
Nope, they don't change the law.
Law makers change the law.
Yes, they do. When the overturn settled precedent, they are changing the law.
No, they can overturn precedent because it violates Constitution.
It's not making law.
And when that happens and there are no people of certain races admitted to elite colleges, then they sue, and win, (because that is absolute proof of systemic societal racism) what happens then?
No it's not absolute proof of systemic societal racism.
NBA has only 0.4% of Asians.
Is that absolute proof of systemic societal racism?
The NBA argument? Really? That's all you got?
Dumbest argument ever.
Try again.
I'm interested. Why NBA shouldn't be diverse to reflect population?
No, you are humping a strawman which is entirely irrelevant for reasons you absolutely know, and I won't engage to allow you to gish gallop past the relevant point. Stop being pathetic. Try yet again.
Nope, PP has a very relevant point. Why is there a severe lack of diversity in a billion dollar industry like the NBA? Hardly any Hispanics, Asians, etc. Why is the NBA exempt from diversity that reflects the country?
Oh that's right, because the NBA only wants the best players based on their merits regardless of their race. Funny how that works in a billion dollars sports industry, yet we don't apply the same logic at universities.
Sigh. Go ahead, join in on the stupid.
There have been many instances of racism in employment in professional sports throughout history. Maybe you've heard of Jackie Robinson?
Stupid, stupid argument. Please don't make this point where people know who you are. I tell you this for your own good.
Yes racism is bad.
Also it's not absolute proof of systemic societal racism just because a certain race is severely underrepresented.
Is a diverse class important? That is subjective. In Harvard's view, it is valuable. It is not against the law to believe this is an important attribute of a class. If they need to change their criteria to achieve that, ok.
You think the highest test scores are the most valuable criteria but that is also subjective.
I think GPA + Test scores + ECs + Awards + Speical talents + etc. are all good.
I think racism is bad, so change criteria in a manner not discriminate againt race.
this is money + school system. all of it.![]()
Poor schools serving poor students still give A and offer ECs
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Higher education shoud be mainly for acedemic merit and must be color blind.
"Of 35,000 applicants competing for 1,600 spots in the class of 2019, 2,700 had perfect verbal SAT scores; 3,400 had perfect math SAT scores; more than 8,000 had perfect GPAs."
From the facts in the actual case. Now what?
But that are the scores of the applicants. What are the verbal SAT, math SAT, and GPA of the admitted students?
Why does that matter. Harvard would not be able to fill its seats based merely on a formula on "objective" scores like SAT scores or GPA. If they only considered perfect GPA or perfect SAT scores or whatever, they would still have to choose between applicants to fill their class. And they, as a private institution, should be able to decide that these scores are not what they are looking for in a student body. They have determined that their formula for selecting Harvard students tries to suss out potential to make an impact in some way or the other. They may be wrong. And if they are wrong, their brand value will go down. Let the market determine if their strategy is successful or not.
It matters because Harvard admitted students with very low scores in the name of R
Why can't Harvard admit students who have low test scores or no test scores at all?
They can as long as they don't discriminate against race
And the courts have found that they do not.
Sorry we have Supreme Court going on right now.
It's called 'Supreme' for a reason.
Yes, they are deciding whether or not to change decided precedent. That means these schools followed the law as it was, which is what the lower courts found. But now, this new Supreme Court may decided to change the established law (even though they aren't supposed to do that). I would not anticipate a retroactive application of it if they do change the law though.
Nope, they don't change the law.
Law makers change the law.
Yes, they do. When the overturn settled precedent, they are changing the law.
No, they can overturn precedent because it violates Constitution.
It's not making law.
And when that happens and there are no people of certain races admitted to elite colleges, then they sue, and win, (because that is absolute proof of systemic societal racism) what happens then?
No it's not absolute proof of systemic societal racism.
NBA has only 0.4% of Asians.
Is that absolute proof of systemic societal racism?
The NBA argument? Really? That's all you got?
Dumbest argument ever.
Try again.
I'm interested. Why NBA shouldn't be diverse to reflect population?
No, you are humping a strawman which is entirely irrelevant for reasons you absolutely know, and I won't engage to allow you to gish gallop past the relevant point. Stop being pathetic. Try yet again.
Nope, PP has a very relevant point. Why is there a severe lack of diversity in a billion dollar industry like the NBA? Hardly any Hispanics, Asians, etc. Why is the NBA exempt from diversity that reflects the country?
Oh that's right, because the NBA only wants the best players based on their merits regardless of their race. Funny how that works in a billion dollars sports industry, yet we don't apply the same logic at universities.
Sigh. Go ahead, join in on the stupid.
There have been many instances of racism in employment in professional sports throughout history. Maybe you've heard of Jackie Robinson?
Stupid, stupid argument. Please don't make this point where people know who you are. I tell you this for your own good.
Yes racism is bad.
Also it's not absolute proof of systemic societal racism just because a certain race is severely underrepresented.
Is a diverse class important? That is subjective. In Harvard's view, it is valuable. It is not against the law to believe this is an important attribute of a class. If they need to change their criteria to achieve that, ok.
You think the highest test scores are the most valuable criteria but that is also subjective.
I think GPA + Test scores + ECs + Awards + Speical talents + etc. are all good.
I think racism is bad, so change criteria in a manner not discriminate againt race.
this is money + school system. all of it.![]()
Poor schools serving poor students still give A and offer ECs
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Prediction: Black SAT scores rise discontinuously in 2023.
Prediction: test optional becomes the norm in 2023 and SAT scores become even LESS relevant.
A lot of students won't take the SAT/ ACT.
Totally wrong.
Most students will take the test multiple times, and if scores are low, then hide it.