Anonymous wrote:Scripps! Ultra-super lefty now. Gender studies everywhere.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How about Harvard:
https://www.harvard.edu/media-relations/media-resources/popular-topics/unrecognized-single-gender-social-organizations
If you, in your spare time, are part of any group that is single-sex, then as a Harvard student you are banned from playing on a sports team or holding a student leadership position.
That includes being a member of groups for women in STEM fields. In your spare time.
What's next, they'll ban you depending on which church or mosque you attend on the weekend?
It's not clear that's the case. A "final club" of men clearly would trigger the policy as a "social organization," but I'd bet they treat associations of female STEM majors differently.
It's all based on the assumption that men cannot be allowed to exclude women in any social context. Women and minorities rarely are held to similar standards by college administrators.
Anonymous wrote:Well avoid Berkeley ^^. I'm not sure there are any even-handed schools left in California. I attended Harvard Law. It has become so left that I no longer give any money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My SLAC has gone crazy left and doesn't even tolerate conservative or republican points of view. So I don't give. That doesn't mean much in of itself but there are sufficient alumni who feel this way such as it has really made the endowment suffer. The other problem is that the institution went from highly selective to almost 50% selectivity rate -
due to lack of quality applications - which just disgusts a lot of alums. It was once a great school but no longer is.
I'm having a hard time coming up with any SLACs that used to be highly selective but now have a 50% admission rate. So I'm going to call this one fake news.
Well, off the top of my head there's Occidental College. It used to be on the same level as Pomona and Stanford in California. Now it has a 45+% acceptance rate.
When was Occidental on the same level as Stanford and Pomona?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My SLAC has gone crazy left and doesn't even tolerate conservative or republican points of view. So I don't give. That doesn't mean much in of itself but there are sufficient alumni who feel this way such as it has really made the endowment suffer. The other problem is that the institution went from highly selective to almost 50% selectivity rate -
due to lack of quality applications - which just disgusts a lot of alums. It was once a great school but no longer is.
I'm having a hard time coming up with any SLACs that used to be highly selective but now have a 50% admission rate. So I'm going to call this one fake news.
Well, off the top of my head there's Occidental College. It used to be on the same level as Pomona and Stanford in California. Now it has a 45+% acceptance rate.
Anonymous wrote:Yale is on the cusp. There is a silent but very real tug of war between the more moderate/conservative factions of students, faculty, alums, admins etc and the very liberal ones. I think the ultra liberal side might be winning but the fight is not over yet. They haven't become Brown just yet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to Notre Dame for undergrad. No. In fact one of the things I liked most about it was that it's very politically diverse. Like, a 50/50 split which is pretty rare at colleges these days. I liked being in an environment where there really was people on all along the political spectrum not just "liberal" to "practically communist."
And then I went to Yale for law school and yeah...that one's gone a little far. No money to them.
I really respect the way some ND students walked out at graduation. They got to protest his policies, but let other students and their families appreciate the special day. Back in the day I saw it as a conservative school, but now I would encourage my children to attend.
Anonymous wrote:I went to Notre Dame for undergrad. No. In fact one of the things I liked most about it was that it's very politically diverse. Like, a 50/50 split which is pretty rare at colleges these days. I liked being in an environment where there really was people on all along the political spectrum not just "liberal" to "practically communist."
And then I went to Yale for law school and yeah...that one's gone a little far. No money to them.