Accordin to your link, at Berkeley and UCLA the drops were large and persistent over the time frame. While UC schools could not discriminate on the basis of race, they could discriminate along other vectors such as income, coming from a family with few or no college grads, coming from a school that doesn’t have a history of sending a lot of kids to 4 year colleges the percentage of California minorities going on to 4 year colleges has diminished. trhe admission rate at Berkeley went from 26% to 11% and with the implementation of these other vectors, the rate has climbed to over 16% and holding steady.
Your links seem to say much the same thing.
You know there are more white kids at UCLA than Asian kids, right?
Wait. What?!?!
First of all you’r not stating it bluntly. Lets use the words we mean and not some mealymouthed vague references to “a particular race” and “other races”. So the distinction you are making is that this isn’t discrimination against Asians this is discrimination in favor of whites, which just HAPPENS to result in fewer Asians being accepted but this doesn’t mean that its tougher for Asians to get in. Are the higher average scores and the disparity in acceptance rates between white students and asian students with teh same scores, just an unrelated coincidence.
So because we cannot achieve perfect we shouldn’t try for better? Take the UC system. They are race blind but they do select for students who come from high schools that do not send a lot of kids to 4 year colleges, they select for low income, they select for first in family to attend college and they end up with similar underrepresented minority populations in the system as a whole even if more of that population is not at UCLA and UC Berkeley.
Its not Ivy League per se. I include all top schools and if you don’t think that there is a difference between the opportunities available to someone who graduates from a top school and someone who doesn’t then you are cracked.
I think its closer to 21% but who gives a shit, the graduation rate in the UC system for underrepresented minorities started to approach the average graduation rate (note the UC system system admits the top 1/8th of california high school graduaates and the top 4% of any particular school, they are allocated to the different campuses on teh applciation process, so the applicant pool is not exactly random to begin with).
Is that really the critieria? Let in any applicants of a particular race that successfully graduate?
If acceptance is not a direct metric function of scores and grades (as everyone here including you seem to believe), why would the graduation rate be?
Their admission to and graduation from other schools like UC Davis seems to be pretty good. And I believe pepople have been making the argument that it doesn’t really matter what school you go to because they are all pretty much the same, they can graduate from Davis and they’ll do OK.
Or do these concerns only apply to underrepresented minorities?
Sorry its been almost 30 years, I didn’t go to Rice and I didn’t keep the letter.
Now that I think about it the letter probably didn’t include the offer of a free plane ride but when I called them, they offered to fly me out (a couple of colleges offered to fly me to their campus but I didn’t really want to visit Texas) and when I asked more about it they said that it was my SATs. Now they may have been reluctant to tell me it was my race or my family income or geography (although I don’t know why they would have trouble getting applicants from NYC) but thats what they told me.
I got sebveral letters offering admission and a free ride (a lot of kids I went to school with got these letters) without ever having sent in an application (and remember this was back in the day when every school had its own unique application) and Rice was one of them. Maybe you should ask them how they operated back then. I never applied so I don’t know what the “box” is but they might have made me fill out an application if I decided to pursue it.
Well like I said it was almost 30 years ago so I might be misremembering but I am pretty sure they offered me a full ride without my ever having even seen an application and I’m pretty sure they offered to fly me out if I was serious about attending, I certainly couldn’t have afforded to fly out on my own.
Does Rice really need more Asians? Or poor children of immigrants? Or kids from NYC? My GPA was just average but I had a pretty good SAT scores. The only other thing i can think of is that I was a national merit scholar but I think that was just from getting good PSAT scores, there might have been a one page application or something to actually get the scholarship money. But I wasn’t Westinghouse or anything like that.
Of course they are coachable FOR YOU. Take a 1800 test score student and try to coach them to 2400. There is a limit to the coachability.
They are the only objective measures that we have and when the admission rates diverge considerably from what you would expect based on the only objective measures you can get your hands on, it raises questions. When the disparity is so great between similarly credentialed kids of different races, you can’t help but suspect that maybe race has soemthing to do with it. When teh state of California school system admissions process goes race blind and the Asian population increases significantly as a result that tends to confirm your suspicion.
Noone seems to be able to identify anything objective (like recs essays activites and awards) that would explain the skew. The ony thing we have is a cite to an article that concludes that Asian kids engage in more individual rather than group or team activities and they tend to hang out with other Asians. Hardly the sort of thing that you would expect to lead to such large disparities.