Anonymous wrote:I think the unfortunate issue here are the academic results that are rolling in with the new process. Scores are much lower on SOLs and PSATs and achieved Math.
It also shows the new system isn’t selecting for geniuses that were left out because rich kids gamed the admissions. It actually confirms that the previous admits were just academically better students… in many areas.
Anonymous wrote:
ACCEPTANCE RATE:
After the admissions change, Asian students were still accepted at a higher rate than almost all other groups:
Asian 19%
Black 14%
Hispanic 21%
White 17%
Multiracial/Other* 13%
ALL 18%
LOW-INCOME ASIAN STUDENTS BENEFITED THE MOST FROM CHANGES
https://www.ca4.uscourts.gov/opinions/221280.P.pdf
page 16
"Nevertheless, in the 2021 application cycle, Asian American students attending middle schools historically underrepresented at TJ saw a sixfold
increase in offers, and the number of low-income Asian American admittees to TJ increased to 51 — from a mere one in 2020."
No discrimination.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:0.6%, <1%, of the class of 2024 came from a low-income family.
They wanted to eliminate the inequitable admissions process.
And look who benefited the most - Asian students from low-income families.
They wanted to balance race. This is clear from the email and text traffic between the FCPS board members. And in the process...
Asian admissions dropped even as the class size grew larger.
White admissions rose the most.
Between the last year under the old system and the most recent class:
white admissions rose by 54 (more than all other racial groups combined)
black admissions rose by 12
hispanic admissiosns rose by 25
multiracial rose by 7
asian admissions dropped by 40
To be fair the county is mostly white so if are trying to be more representative of the county you are going to get more white kids.
But you are selecting for race not merit.
should it be more representative of the demographic makeup of the county or the applications? If 95% of the applications for varsity ice hockey team are white students, or if 95% of the applications to high school basketball team are black students, or if 95% of the applications to math counts team are asian students, should the selected make-up in each of those teams still be based on county racial composition?
If they did it based on applications, that would lower the current # of Asian students, as they are admitted at a higher rate than average.
are you sure?
from another thread... denied % as well as count appears to be drastically different based on student ethnicity
![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:0.6%, <1%, of the class of 2024 came from a low-income family.
They wanted to eliminate the inequitable admissions process.
And look who benefited the most - Asian students from low-income families.
They wanted to balance race. This is clear from the email and text traffic between the FCPS board members. And in the process...
Asian admissions dropped even as the class size grew larger.
White admissions rose the most.
Between the last year under the old system and the most recent class:
white admissions rose by 54 (more than all other racial groups combined)
black admissions rose by 12
hispanic admissiosns rose by 25
multiracial rose by 7
asian admissions dropped by 40
To be fair the county is mostly white so if are trying to be more representative of the county you are going to get more white kids.
But you are selecting for race not merit.
should it be more representative of the demographic makeup of the county or the applications? If 95% of the applications for varsity ice hockey team are white students, or if 95% of the applications to high school basketball team are black students, or if 95% of the applications to math counts team are asian students, should the selected make-up in each of those teams still be based on county racial composition?
If they did it based on applications, that would lower the current # of Asian students, as they are admitted at a higher rate than average.
are you sure?
from another thread... denied % as well as count appears to be drastically different based on student ethnicity
![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
ACCEPTANCE RATE:
After the admissions change, Asian students were still accepted at a higher rate than almost all other groups:
Asian 19%
Black 14%
Hispanic 21%
White 17%
Multiracial/Other* 13%
ALL 18%
LOW-INCOME ASIAN STUDENTS BENEFITED THE MOST FROM CHANGES
https://www.ca4.uscourts.gov/opinions/221280.P.pdf
page 16
"Nevertheless, in the 2021 application cycle, Asian American students attending middle schools historically underrepresented at TJ saw a sixfold
increase in offers, and the number of low-income Asian American admittees to TJ increased to 51 — from a mere one in 2020."
No discrimination.
Thanks for clearing this up.
Asian admissions went down.
White admissions went up.
That was the intended consequence.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
ACCEPTANCE RATE:
After the admissions change, Asian students were still accepted at a higher rate than almost all other groups:
Asian 19%
Black 14%
Hispanic 21%
White 17%
Multiracial/Other* 13%
ALL 18%
LOW-INCOME ASIAN STUDENTS BENEFITED THE MOST FROM CHANGES
https://www.ca4.uscourts.gov/opinions/221280.P.pdf
page 16
"Nevertheless, in the 2021 application cycle, Asian American students attending middle schools historically underrepresented at TJ saw a sixfold
increase in offers, and the number of low-income Asian American admittees to TJ increased to 51 — from a mere one in 2020."
No discrimination.
Thanks for clearing this up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:0.6%, <1%, of the class of 2024 came from a low-income family.
They wanted to eliminate the inequitable admissions process.
And look who benefited the most - Asian students from low-income families.
They wanted to balance race. This is clear from the email and text traffic between the FCPS board members. And in the process...
Asian admissions dropped even as the class size grew larger.
White admissions rose the most.
Between the last year under the old system and the most recent class:
white admissions rose by 54 (more than all other racial groups combined)
black admissions rose by 12
hispanic admissiosns rose by 25
multiracial rose by 7
asian admissions dropped by 40
To be fair the county is mostly white so if are trying to be more representative of the county you are going to get more white kids.
But you are selecting for race not merit.
should it be more representative of the demographic makeup of the county or the applications? If 95% of the applications for varsity ice hockey team are white students, or if 95% of the applications to high school basketball team are black students, or if 95% of the applications to math counts team are asian students, should the selected make-up in each of those teams still be based on county racial composition?
If they did it based on applications, that would lower the current # of Asian students, as they are admitted at a higher rate than average.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
ACCEPTANCE RATE:
After the admissions change, Asian students were still accepted at a higher rate than almost all other groups:
Asian 19%
Black 14%
Hispanic 21%
White 17%
Multiracial/Other* 13%
ALL 18%
LOW-INCOME ASIAN STUDENTS BENEFITED THE MOST FROM CHANGES
https://www.ca4.uscourts.gov/opinions/221280.P.pdf
page 16
"Nevertheless, in the 2021 application cycle, Asian American students attending middle schools historically underrepresented at TJ saw a sixfold
increase in offers, and the number of low-income Asian American admittees to TJ increased to 51 — from a mere one in 2020."
No discrimination.
Thanks for clearing this up.
Anonymous wrote:
ACCEPTANCE RATE:
After the admissions change, Asian students were still accepted at a higher rate than almost all other groups:
Asian 19%
Black 14%
Hispanic 21%
White 17%
Multiracial/Other* 13%
ALL 18%
LOW-INCOME ASIAN STUDENTS BENEFITED THE MOST FROM CHANGES
https://www.ca4.uscourts.gov/opinions/221280.P.pdf
page 16
"Nevertheless, in the 2021 application cycle, Asian American students attending middle schools historically underrepresented at TJ saw a sixfold
increase in offers, and the number of low-income Asian American admittees to TJ increased to 51 — from a mere one in 2020."
No discrimination.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:0.6%, <1%, of the class of 2024 came from a low-income family.
They wanted to eliminate the inequitable admissions process.
And look who benefited the most - Asian students from low-income families.
They wanted to balance race. This is clear from the email and text traffic between the FCPS board members. And in the process...
Asian admissions dropped even as the class size grew larger.
White admissions rose the most.
Between the last year under the old system and the most recent class:
white admissions rose by 54 (more than all other racial groups combined)
black admissions rose by 12
hispanic admissiosns rose by 25
multiracial rose by 7
asian admissions dropped by 40
To be fair the county is mostly white so if are trying to be more representative of the county you are going to get more white kids.
But you are selecting for race not merit.
should it be more representative of the demographic makeup of the county or the applications? If 95% of the applications for varsity ice hockey team are white students, or if 95% of the applications to high school basketball team are black students, or if 95% of the applications to math counts team are asian students, should the selected make-up in each of those teams still be based on county racial composition?
If they did it based on applications, that would lower the current # of Asian students, as they are admitted at a higher rate than average.
are you sure?
from another thread... denied % as well as count appears to be drastically different based on student ethnicity
![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:0.6%, <1%, of the class of 2024 came from a low-income family.
They wanted to eliminate the inequitable admissions process.
And look who benefited the most - Asian students from low-income families.
They wanted to balance race. This is clear from the email and text traffic between the FCPS board members. And in the process...
Asian admissions dropped even as the class size grew larger.
White admissions rose the most.
Between the last year under the old system and the most recent class:
white admissions rose by 54 (more than all other racial groups combined)
black admissions rose by 12
hispanic admissiosns rose by 25
multiracial rose by 7
asian admissions dropped by 40
To be fair the county is mostly white so if are trying to be more representative of the county you are going to get more white kids.
But you are selecting for race not merit.
should it be more representative of the demographic makeup of the county or the applications? If 95% of the applications for varsity ice hockey team are white students, or if 95% of the applications to high school basketball team are black students, or if 95% of the applications to math counts team are asian students, should the selected make-up in each of those teams still be based on county racial composition?
If they did it based on applications, that would lower the current # of Asian students, as they are admitted at a higher rate than average.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:0.6%, <1%, of the class of 2024 came from a low-income family.
They wanted to eliminate the inequitable admissions process.
And look who benefited the most - Asian students from low-income families.
They wanted to balance race. This is clear from the email and text traffic between the FCPS board members. And in the process...
Asian admissions dropped even as the class size grew larger.
White admissions rose the most.
Between the last year under the old system and the most recent class:
white admissions rose by 54 (more than all other racial groups combined)
black admissions rose by 12
hispanic admissiosns rose by 25
multiracial rose by 7
asian admissions dropped by 40
To be fair the county is mostly white so if are trying to be more representative of the county you are going to get more white kids.
But you are selecting for race not merit.
should it be more representative of the demographic makeup of the county or the applications? If 95% of the applications for varsity ice hockey team are white students, or if 95% of the applications to high school basketball team are black students, or if 95% of the applications to math counts team are asian students, should the selected make-up in each of those teams still be based on county racial composition?