California Bans Legacy Admissions At Private, Nonprofit Universities (politico.com) 137
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Politico: It will soon be illegal for public and private universities in California to consider an applicant's relationship to alumni or donors when deciding whether to admit them. Gov. Gavin Newsom on Monday signed a ban on the practice known as legacy admissions, a change that will affect prestigious institutions including Stanford University and the University of Southern California. California's law, which will take effect Sept. 1, 2025, is the nation's fifth legacy admissions ban, but only the second that will apply to private colleges. "In California, everyone should be able to get ahead through merit, skill, and hard work," Newsom said in a statement. "The California Dream shouldn't be accessible to just a lucky few, which is why we're opening the door to higher education wide enough for everyone, fairly."
Like other states, California won't financially penalize violators, but it will post the names of violators on the state Department of Justice's website. California will also add to data reporting requirements that it implemented in 2022, when private colleges had to start sharing the percentage of admitted students who were related to donors and alumni. Schools that run afoul of the new law will also have to report more granular demographic information about their incoming classes to the state, including the race and income of enrolled students as well as their participation in athletics. [...] Public universities in California won't be affected by the change. California State University does not consider legacy or donor ties, and the University of California system stopped doing so in 1998, two years after California voters banned race-conscious admissions through a statewide ballot measure.
Like other states, California won't financially penalize violators, but it will post the names of violators on the state Department of Justice's website. California will also add to data reporting requirements that it implemented in 2022, when private colleges had to start sharing the percentage of admitted students who were related to donors and alumni. Schools that run afoul of the new law will also have to report more granular demographic information about their incoming classes to the state, including the race and income of enrolled students as well as their participation in athletics. [...] Public universities in California won't be affected by the change. California State University does not consider legacy or donor ties, and the University of California system stopped doing so in 1998, two years after California voters banned race-conscious admissions through a statewide ballot measure.
"everyone should be able to get ahead..." (Score:4, Interesting)
"...through merit, skill, and hard work"
Excellent idea in theory!
In practice, however, there is no perfect way to accurately measure "merit, skill, and hard work". It's all still subjective with lots of room for incompetence, favoritism and corruption
Cue the NAACP lawsuit. (Score:1, Insightful)
Since admitting based on merit runs counter to their affirmative action mindset, expect Gavin to be served.
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I've long believed the "elite" institutions should set a minimum bar for entry and then have a lottery where everyone who meets that minimum gets their name in the drawing and the institution chooses until their class is full.
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"merit, skill, and hard work" aren't meant to be an objective measure. They are academia dog whistles meant to evoke Ralph Waldo Emerson's essay "The American Scholar". Seen in this light, it looks like "merit" will be the replacement for legacy admissions going forward, allowing some students get to the front of the line by virtue alone.
Re:Never let perfect be the enemy of good (Score:5, Insightful)
Yeah, that's not the issue. The problem with restricting legacies isn't how it affects the affluent who buy their way into school, the issue is restricting a private institution's right to provide a service to those they wish.
Think of the cake scenario, this isn't forcing the cake maker to sell to someone they don't want to. It isn't even forcing them to make a custom creation for someone they don't want to. It's telling them they aren't allowed to sell or even give a cake away to someone they like, personally, because it might reduce the amount of cake available to others. The product of your labor now belongs to the state and can only be doled out at their whim.
That's a huge overreach. Once the precedent is set, why stop with legacies. Why not disallow them to admit students based on academic merit and instead only allow them to offer schooling to financially disadvantaged regardless of their scholastic achievement. You laugh, but it's the exact same argument. Why should the best schools be monopolized by the best students?
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While I agree with what you're saying ...
It's telling them they aren't allowed to sell or even give a cake away to someone they like, personally, because it might reduce the amount of cake available to others.
They're not forcing you to not sell the cake to whomever you want to. They're just gonna put your name on a wall of shame on the DOJ web site. I'd argue that even that is an overreach.
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So we've got to the point where adherence to an ideology has people taking issue with the government showing a list of _facts_ to the public?
One of the foundations of the free market is that everyone has the same access to the same pool of factual information so that they can make informed decisions. We shouldn't allow corporations (or in this case universities) to distort that market by preventing some from having access to that information.
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More importantly, the government officially regognises their qualifications as being a valid measure of competence in the subject area, which is the reason why people want to go there in the first place.
If they want their own rules (Score:2)
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Yeah, that's not the issue. The problem with restricting legacies isn't how it affects the affluent who buy their way into school, the issue is restricting a private institution's right to provide a service to those they wish.
[...]
That's a huge overreach. Once the precedent is set, why stop with legacies. Why not disallow them to admit students based on academic merit and instead only allow them to offer schooling to financially disadvantaged regardless of their scholastic achievement. You laugh, but it's the exact same argument. Why should the best schools be monopolized by the best students?
Even more crazy, maybe they could decide that a private institution wasn't allowed to factor in race in order to create a more diverse student body [wikipedia.org]!!
Because that actually is the exact same argument.
The only thing that's different is your jump to "academic merit". But banning affirmative action and restricting legacy admissions are eliminating mechanisms used in the place of academic merit. Your jump to banning admission based on academic merit would actually be a jump in the opposite direction.
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That's not the same argument, it's the opposite. One is restricting the criteria you can deny access, the other is restricting the criteria for allowing access. We have long held that it can and often is appropriate to limit who can be denied access to things, but there are far fewer examples of the opposite. The only thing I can think of off the top of my head is restricting the sale of firearms to felons.
There's limited spots, giving access to one is denying access to another.
Heck, the way affirmative action was carried out literally was allowing more access for minorities.
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FYI, that cake baker is back in court because he agreed to make a cake, agreed to every detail of it, then found out the customer was trans so wouldn't sell it to them. The exact design he would sell to someone else. It was always just about bigotry, not some high minded compelled speech nonsense.
Which baker? Is this just continuing the mental exercise or are you referring to an actual case?
In the real world only two major baker/LGBT civil cases come to mind. Neither involved the T part of the acronym and neither involved the scenario you described. Both were requests for LG wedding cakes where the baker was up front in their refusal of business. No 'agreed to every detail of it, then...'.
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Googling is not hard
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
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Restrictions on Public Services Already Common (Score:4, Insightful)
the issue is restricting a private institution's right to provide a service to those they wish.
We do this all the time already to anyone who offers a public service. For example, you cannot refuse to hire women if you are an employer nor can a landlord refuse to rent to people of a particular race etc. Frankly it is appalling that US universities consider the size of donations a family has made when considering an applicant and they shoudl be ashamed that a law like this was even needed.
That said, I doubt this law will make much difference if your universities think this sort of appalling behaviour is fine. All they will do is create a certain number of high-tuition places open to anyone who can pay enough and then, instead of donations, those families will be paying tuition for a space and since those spaces will be technically open to anyone the only consideration is whether your family can afford it.
Why should the best schools be monopolized by the best students?
There are lots of very good arguments for this but basically they all boil down to the fact that this gives the best outcome for both the individual and society. For example, do you really want your next doctor to be someone who barely passed their medical exams or to have your country fall behind in science and technology because the people you are training in science and engineering at your top universities are not as capable as those from other countries etc? That's why you want your best and brightest at your top universities and not just your richest. Also remember that universities are charities and so society is giving them a significant tax break. If a university wants to go after rich students then they should at a minimum lose their charitable status since they are now acting like a private business and not a charity.
Re:Restrictions on Public Services - nope (Score:2)
Actually it may be illegal to do this but it is happening in corporations. What do you think DEI is? It's giving preferential treatment to those who are NOT a white male, more so, old white males. Don't laugh it's happening all over the place.
So it may be illegal to do it, but it's being done an
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the issue is restricting a private institution's right to provide a service to those they wish.
We do this all the time already to anyone who offers a public service. For example, you cannot refuse to hire women if you are an employer nor can a landlord refuse to rent to people of a particular race etc. Frankly it is appalling that US universities consider the size of donations a family has made when considering an applicant and they shoudl be ashamed that a law like this was even needed.
No we don't, those are fundamentally different things. Take a step back and think about your example, it's about preventing institutions from restricting access. What we are discussing is not that, we are discussing preventing institutions from allowing access to a specific class.
There are examples you could have made where the government does this, but not many. The government doesn't allow firearms to be sold to felons. It doesn't allow narcotics to be sold to those without a prescription, etc. General
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we are discussing preventing institutions from allowing access to a specific class.
This is the flip side of the same coin. Universities have limits to the number of students they can accept so if they are taking students from rich families that means they are automatically denying some students from poorer families. Indeed, take the landlord example I just gave and flip it to preferentially renting to one race over others and you have exactly the same situation now expressed as allowing special access to one race. The only difference between what I said and what you said is one of presen
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This hardly new. The state doesn't allow them to make choices based on things like race or gender either.
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Yeah, that's not the issue. The problem with restricting legacies isn't how it affects the affluent who buy their way into school, the issue is restricting a private institution's right to provide a service to those they wish.
The problem with that idea is treating universities as if they're private institutions. In most countries, they're either public or semi-public as they're vital to the economic improvement of a country. Far to important to be left to the hands of private businesses.
Universities are also walking a tightrope, they need graduates to perform well to keep their standing, so if they become an organisation known for taking in trust fund babies and producing trust fund young adults of spectacular mediocrity who
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That's a huge overreach. Once the precedent is set, why stop with legacies. Why not disallow them to admit students based on academic merit and instead only allow them to offer schooling to financially disadvantaged regardless of their scholastic achievement.
Because that's just you fear mongering, apparently your core point wasn't good enough so you had to make up something to make things extra scary. Thanks for that JD.
The slippery slope is a logical fallacy for a reason.
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issue is restricting a private institution's right to provide a service to those they wish
Then don't take any state or federal money for the institution (including Pell grants and any federally subsidized loans). If taxpayers are going to fund a portion of your school then they should expect it to serve the public's interests.
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"On the other hand everything's supposed to be a meritocracy."
Everything is indeed not supposed to be meritocracy. You most likely don't pick your friends based on merit.
This law violates freedom of contract. Freedom of contract is why you can pick your friends, partner, guests in your home etc on whatever ground you want, i.e., it is extremely fundamental in a free society. Of course, it does not apply to the state - the state must follow predictable rules about who to enter a contract with (to prevent cor
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It's not exactly the same but it certainly rhymes with prosperity gospel.
"wide enough for everyone, fairly" (Score:2, Insightful)
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But according to the anti-DEI zealots, any effort to adjust for the fact that our society offers far fewer opportunities to non-white, lower income students is "racist." Okay.
...Why are you talking about white people when one of the largest lawsuits against discriminatory college admissions practices was brought on behalf of Asian-Americans? See Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard.
Why not just leave it at "lower income students" and leave off the race?
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Why not just leave it at "lower income students" and leave off the race?
Because discrimination by race in the United States has been implemented broadly for the entire existence of the United States, and to ignore that history and its present implications continues and extends that racism.
But I do agree with your broader point in that "diversity" is about more than race, and many people for a variety of social and cultural reasons have difficulty accessing and finding success in higher education.
I think you forgot something, Gov. Newsom (Score:3)
"In California, everyone should be able to get ahead through merit, skill, and hard work," Newsom said in a statement
What about crippling student loan debt? I suppose that falls under that whole "hard work" umbrella...
Re: I think you forgot something, Gov. Newsom (Score:3)
If you want to solve that problem, you're going to have to limit the availability of student loans. Among other things, put tighter controls on how much is given for cost of living expenses (today's loans allow students to spend like drunken sailors, and that's exactly what many do and then complain about having to pay it all back) and limit the tuition rates for schools that want eligibility for any federal aid at all (loans, FAFSA, etc.)
Watch how fast academia goes back to being academia again.
Re: I think you forgot something, Gov. Newsom (Score:4, Insightful)
Oh, and for that same eligibility, forbid the practice of requiring textbooks with one-time-use codes or any other non-consumable materials that are designed to not be re-sold on the open market. That's a racket that should have stopped a long time ago.
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I can speak anecdotally as I don't know how much "in-pocket" expenses the loans give each student, but my daughter is going to graduate medical school with about a $370K debt (all from medical school). Of that, 20K/year was for living expenses. That's not much. Certainly barely enough to pay for an apartment, maintaining a car, food expenses, and miscellaneous.
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put tighter controls on how much is given for cost of living expenses
The current system actually puts a feedback loop in place for that, and it usually runs in the wrong direction:
* Loan availability is based on cost of attending the school in question
* Service providers near schools see that students have loan money to spend, so they raise housing costs and move local eateries upscale
* Which raises cost of attending the school in question...
That's great. (Score:5, Interesting)
The real access/"equity" problem with college nowadays is the cost. College costs rise at the same rate as government subsidies [visualcapitalist.com] and other loan and student aid programs increase. The cost of college in the 1950's was negligible and people regularly worked their way through school with no debt at all. It was government loans and subsidies that drove the costs sky high. The greedy colleges just increased their tuition by whatever rate people could get loans to attend.
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Yeah, they arguably pay for more than their share on the tuition front when you add donations.
Another argument I've seen is that the colleges, at least Yale, Harvard, and such, are actually social networking institutions almost more than education.
Basically, talented merit accepted students social network with the rich legacies for jobs after graduation.
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Basically, talented merit accepted students social network with the rich legacies for jobs after graduation.
And vice versa. Rich legacies' social networks include a lot of talented people. The result is a world run by people that are part of the same Harvard and Yale social network. You don't go to those schools to get an education. You go to a small private college or public university where the professors actually teach students. You go to Yale or Harvard because your life is defined by ambition. No matter what your ambitions, there will people at Harvard and Yale that can help you achieve them.
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You don't go to those schools to get an education. You go to a small private college or public university where the professors actually teach students.
Your thesis is that the quality of education at Harvard and Yale is so poor that you would get a better education elsewhere -- the professors don't "actually teach students".
Something tells me you didn't go to college at all, but you seriously resent those who did.
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Indeed. I said "almost more than education" because they're still very good schools, but other accredited schools are pretty much as good, sometimes better, sometimes worse, but the variation of the average student is about the same.
But the stupidly high standards of those institutions, outside of legacies, helps craft a narrative that helps said students succeed more easily, even without the social networking.
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Oops, editing problem left something unclear: I was trying to say that the variations between students makes more of a difference in the educational outcome than the differences in instruction and such at places like Harvard and Yale.
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Re: That's great. (Score:2)
Labor productivity has increased by a factor of 5 in that time frame. Do you think "small section" classes now have 75 students in them?
Re:That's great. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: That's great. (Score:2)
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I'm against any US money being spent on the endless wars.
What would help people is if less of their money was taken in taxes; people can allocate their own money on what benefits them much better than the government can.
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So the people who provide the most direct benefit to the school, who grow its faculty and facility, and fund its research are foul? If we make the assumption (and granted, it may be a bad assumption) that tuition is roughly in-line with the cost to provide an education, then most students who do not rely on scholarship are basically net neutral. Legacies on the other hand, primaries those who get their slots through donations to the school, are a major net positive. They provide the funds that allow the s
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but an outright ban seems like it might have unintended consequences.
Yeah, I mean heaven forbid people like George Bush get into Yale. But I mean, he was a competent president, right?
Your idea seems to be that if they get rid of legacy admissions, they will not get as much money. Extrapolate that into the worst case and these colleges go out of business. Then we'd need to have public colleges. We might have to find plans for system like that in California, nothing existing like that already.
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Legacy admissions are pretty foul, but they probably provide the school with a lot of donations from rich parents who were former alumni. I'd be okay to placing some limits on them, but an outright ban seems like it might have unintended consequences.
Why would they care? That's a problem for politicians of the future to bear. This is all about helping the political profile of current politicians. Besides, Newsom and others can always claim that they "evolved" on the issue if they retract support when the donor pain starts.
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or a LONG time, the only people allowed into college were white
That is an exaggeration. And it is disturbing to the extent that there is a focus on correcting the relatively small disadvantages that our legacy of racism create for the black elite. Its Barack Obama's comment that he "still couldn't get a cab in New York City." as if the impact of racism was just as a source of inconvenience. Its opening the Oscars to more African-American winners in response to a poor black man dying with a white cop's knee on his throat in south Minneapolis. We need to understand that
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Most colleges only really started accepting black students around the 70s
That is complete BS. While some colleges in the United States had explicit race based admissions, most did not. Was there discrimination based on race? Yes? Did it exclude ALL black people from going to college? No. Which makes that claim an exaggeration.
but that is different than acceptance.
Its different only for the person who can afford tuition. Otherwise the outcome is the same.
If you are allowing people to pay to get into the school, that is truly taking spots away from other (poorer) people who deserve to be there.
As opposed to excluding (poorer) people who can't afford to pay which opens spots for (less poor) people who don't deserve to be there.
Merit, skill and hard work? (Score:3)
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You mean they can't admit people based on who can and can't afford the tuition? You will notice they didn't pass a law that ONLY considers merit, skill and hard work. You can still admit people based on their family's prominence or recommendations or ...
What this really means is that the trust fund and nepo babies will now have to do some actual work to:
1. Get into the university; and.
2. Stay there long enough to get their degree in media studies.
It's not going to change much else, it just means that a donation is no longer an automatic ticket to a placement (unless the nepo-kid is a spectacular idiot, which many are, it's not really going to affect them).
I've nothing against Gov. Newsom, I think he's a decent governor, but he does seem to be doi
A giant step sideways for meritocracy (Score:3)
Big name schools grease the skids for athletes and donors. Middle class middlebrow Joe Blow's kid isn't getting any special preferences if he went there unless Joe manages to cough up a six figure donation, with promises of more to come.
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That's essentially how our society reimplemented feudalism running in emulation under capitalism. Of course, the major difference is that if someone from outside the nobility class is particularly "gifted" (are we still allowed to say that?) in athletics or scholastic aptitude, we'll sometimes give them a free ride so they can join the nobility class.
At the end of the day though, we've just changed the criteria for what constitutes a noble birthright. If you're not particularly good at school or sports, w
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Big name schools grease the skids for athletes and donors.
What a shame it would be if that stopped happening. /s
Bullshit (Score:2, Insightful)
Re: Bullshit (Score:3)
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Prop 209 outlawed race- based affirmative action for California public universities in 1996. Just FYI.
And there are dozens of ways to get around that, which Cal institutions know and use. Just like the tax codes.
How the heck are they (Score:2)
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This just in, Harvard to drastically expand the number of regatta, dressage, fencing, and croquet teams.
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DEI (Score:2)
I don't have a strong opinion either way on this issue but I do find it both disgusting and hilarious that Newsome uses that same mouth to promote DEI biases and also say "...through merit, skill, and hard work".
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DEI is a mechanism for selecting the best candidate from a pool of potential applicants where 'merit' is subject to statistical confounding factors.
A candidate that showed a 3 place increase in grade scores studying at a school in a poor area is likely a better hire than someone who achieved a higher grade but didn't exceed expectations at a school in an affluent area. it isn't perfect, but at least it's honestly addressing reality.
If you've been told it's something else, you might want to ponder why it's i
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DEI is a mechanism for selecting the best candidate from a pool of potential applicants where 'merit' is subject to statistical confounding factors.
DEI is just the latest way to implement a quota. You can spin it however you like.
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A candidate that showed a 3 place increase in grade scores studying at a school in a poor area is likely a better hire than someone who achieved a higher grade but didn't exceed expectations at a school in an affluent area.
Link to any study proving this? Yeah, I didn't think so.
Just because people want to redefine "merit" to some arbitrary meaning that supports their fringe worldview doesn't make it so.
Private? (Score:2)
I don't see how California has any jurisdiction on private school admissions.
On top of that, aren't legacy admissions really just focusing on your genealogy...much like where you came from, not only who your daddy is, but what heritage you have? Yet, legacy admissions mean the schools continue to benefit from happy donors. Isn't this really attempting to cutting off the individual funding for schools so the state can swoop in and take over? Seems like a really bad idea.
Re: Private? (Score:2)
The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.
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Really? You just don't see? Can I suggest some remedial high school civics before you enroll? The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.
I mean, ostensibly the government can pass any laws it wants to, but at some point, it starts to run afoul of free speech rights and the right for a private business to do business or refuse to do business with whomever it chooses (within the limits of not discriminating against protected classes, of course). A private college is, after all, a business, albeit ostensibly a charitable one, and nothing prevents them from having a policy of flat out auctioning off positions in the incoming class to the highes
Re: Private? (Score:2)
Only if you believe in incorporation, which is certainly not explicit in the Constitution. And create an implicit definition of "due process of law" for the measure to fail.
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Put another way, if you're judging people based on what school they attended, you're already doing something bad, ...
The main value to industry of schools with selective admissions is the selection part. The private sector in the US is not allowed to give IQ tests or any g-loaded tests that have "disparate impact on protected classes", but colleges can in the form of SATs / LSATs / GMATs etc. So as an employer can ride on those coattails. The fact that a student body of smart and prepared people can
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Put another way, if you're judging people based on what school they attended, you're already doing something bad, ...
The main value to industry of schools with selective admissions is the selection part. The private sector in the US is not allowed to give IQ tests or any g-loaded tests that have "disparate impact on protected classes", but colleges can in the form of SATs / LSATs / GMATs etc. So as an employer can ride on those coattails. The fact that a student body of smart and prepared people can learn faster (and thus classes of the same title can generally can be harder than similar classes at a less selective school) is there too but arguably secondary.
The problem is that even if you ignored that concern, it would still be a fundamentally flawed strategy, because most people won't bother to apply, not because they wouldn't be able to get in (some would), but because they either A. don't want to spend ridiculous amounts of money on an education that might not be all that much better, B. don't have adequate self esteem to believe that they're good enough, C. don't have any interest in going so far away from home, D. have family responsibilities, E. have a j
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Plus more students will be taking out loans. You're replacing a rich donor child with someone else who will need to take out a loan. I mean, assuming that the donar children weren't able to get in on merit alone.
I think California specifically wants everyone to have to rely on the government.
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I'm guessing it is because state of CA provides money of some kind to private schools and therefore have a say in how the school operates. For example a school does not have to follow Title IX regarding women's sports if the school does not receive any federal money. A few smaller schools have gone this route to maintain complete independence. Therefore, I assume the CA private schools could go this route if they wanted, could challenge the law as overstepping on a private institution, or could basically ig
Yale *could* use an international airport Mr Burns (Score:2)
Yale *could* use an international airport Mr Burns
Legacy admissions? Really? (Score:2)
As a Brit, I find the idea appalling. We have no expectation of a parent's going to a university having any influence in getting the child in. To be fair we have only recently started to target graduates for donations actively, though I remember when I was at Oxford over 40 years ago a donation linked to a child being subsequently admitted did get publicity - as something very new. If I remember correctly the donation was in the hundreds of thousands. That's a serious sum of money... but just for your paren
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Because those schools develop pupils really well (Score:2)
They put the resources to very good effect preparing kids for real life. Or are you referring to Oxford and Cambridge? Those are our equivalent to the Ivy League - we have one fifth of your population so fewer elite universities. Plus because we don't have legacy admissions, they're better at getting the brightest ;)
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I seem to recall the Cambridge application form just over 25 years ago asking about relatives who had attended, but I can't remember now whether they only asked about relatives who had attended the same college [1] as the one I was applying to, nor precisely which relatives they were interested in. And I think it was only for statistical purposes: at most, I think it would have been a tie-breaker in case they were unable to separate two candidates.
[1] For people unfamiliar with Oxbridge, "college" here does
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As a Brit, I find the idea appalling. We have no expectation of a parent's going to a university having any influence in getting the child in.
...your country still has a titular monarchy and hereditary nobility, but admission into a university based on who your parents are is "appalling?"
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The royalty keep Americans coming to gawp, so must be a good thing. A small proportion of the hereditary nobility form part of the second chamber and ensure that there is a significantly different perspective apart from the political hacks and ex-senior civil servants is heard. Sadly the new government seems to wanting to reduce the effectiveness of the accountability achieved in parliament by removing them.
But no - other than that birth won't get you any favours; indeed most hereditary peers don't use thei
"Merit, skill and hard work" (Score:2)
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Let me guess, you haven't actually had a 17- or 18-year-old child. At that age, it is very possible to measure things like merit, skill, and hard work. By this time, that young person already has established a reputation, a level of character, a work ethic (or not). An 18-year-old is far from a malleable, innocent little child.
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That measurement may however be a statistically poor predictor of ability at age 25. While excellent candidates at age 18 are likely to remain good (if they don't burn out or crash because their attainment was externally forced), mediocre candidates at age 18 can be excellent by age 25 as they gain experience or escape their upbringing.
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Yes, it's true! Teenagers are not known for their brilliance, and many learn hard lessons and profit from them. So that's a positive thing, I think. Still, the statistical correlation isn't that far off. The stoner at 17 isn't likely to have a dramatic turnaround at 25. The "average" folks, much more likely.
I thought the American Dream was ... (Score:2)
... that through hard honest work you could achieve fame, fortune and the ability to buy anything you want, and that presumably includes a university degree.
social bonding (Score:2)
I find the idea of legacy admissions great to finance universities.
But I am from a country where the relationship with the alma mater is over once you leave university.
Bottom line (Score:2)
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People who "think society exists to serve them" come in all colors and income levels. One thing you got right: such people *are* pretty useless.
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Let's tell a story: Some trust-funded sludge pushes through tainted food in his factory because he wants to pad the next quarterly earnings statement. The batch is never tested by inspectors because he and his fellow travelers bought the state govern
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You are conflating two things: corruption and conservatism. Corruption knows no political boundaries. Liberals and conservatives have equal propensity towards corruption, which is tied more to power than any specific ideology.
Let's change your story just a bit. Instead of "trust fund stooges," we have "Communist party leaders." Instead of "meat-puppet politicians" we have "friends of Xing." Pick a country, pick a political system, Russia, Afghanistan, whichever. If corruption is allowed to flourish, people
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That's quite a claim. Unfortunately, you'd have to basically set every history book on fire to believe it, and ignore the fact that liberalism is alone between the two in actually concerning itself with the notion of corruption and how to fix it. As far as conservatives feel, corruption is just an expression of their "natural strength" and "bold leadership," as are the lies they t
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If you cannot admit that liberals are as much at risk of corruption as any other human being, then we don't really have anything to discuss, because you are not being honest about human nature.
Harvard, Yale, and Ivy League (Score:2)
It's interesting how many of the top public figures in government, media, politicians, academic faculty all come from the Ivy League schools.
It's interesting how many of them also somehow come from wealthy families.
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Among other things, the admissions staff for Harvard and Yale Law Schools should not control who can serve on the US Supreme Court.
Re:Harvard, Yale, and Columbia (Score:2)
Insightful comment.
Most of the currently serving and recent supreme court justices attended Harvard, Yale or Columbia law schools, or when there as undergraduates.
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