broke: race-neutral university admissions on academics, get rid of legacies woke: affirmative action bespoke: expand legacies, tell poor whites *and* black immigrants to get bentpic.twitter.com/ab8sRDRzpl
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broke: race-neutral university admissions on academics, get rid of legacies woke: affirmative action bespoke: expand legacies, tell poor whites *and* black immigrants to get bentpic.twitter.com/ab8sRDRzpl
Curiously, the implication is that the children of black immigrants do not need any assistance in the admissions process because — presumably — the wrong that begs for correction is slavery, not any kind of persisting racism.
I'm not aware of any good numbers on this for college admissions specifically, but African migrants who arrive after 13 or so do really really well on all the standard social functioning and success metrics, and I'd be beyond shocked if they weren't over-represented at Ivies.
In general, legal immigrants have to pass a pretty strong filter. (If I weren't a US citizen, it would be very difficult for me to become one, because I don't have a college degree and I'm not wealthy. Marriage would be my only viable route.)
Yes, and this means that you're getting a very strong preference for students who will do well independently, which is against the point of diversity initiatives.
It sort of begs the question about why we're so set on using indirect proxies for these things, no? There are plenty if ADOS coming from wealthy, college-educated families, and plenty of refugees/illegal immigrants who are not.
I don't think admissions to gatekeeping institutions are any way to make amends to anybody, just as they ought not be utilized to preserve specific families via legacies. Everybody seems perfectly happy to get just get theirs, of course.
Are legacies "asking for a handout"? Maybe, but they obviously wouldn't see it that way. I don't know the best way to correct existing disparities. I don't think that having universities admit students on the basis of anything but academic preparedness is a solution to anything.
In general, if you're having to admit a group that's statistically underprepared in order to have that group at all, the solution lies upstream. Maybe family interventions/funding, probably a pretty dramatic overhaul for K-12.
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