Were Asian-Americans admitted on the basis of academic achievement and extracurricular activities alone, regardless of ethnicity, Harvard would have a near-majority Asian student body (43%), something that Gersen says is undesirable. More
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With a lawsuit against Harvard, Asian-American activists have formed an alliance with a white conservative to change higher education.
In 2012, Michael Wang, a senior at James Logan High School, in the Bay Area, was confident that he had done enough to get into one of his dream schools: Harvard, Yale, Stanford, and Princeton. He had the kind of G.P.A.—4.67—that looks like a typo to anyone older than thirty-five. He had aced the ACT and placed in the ninety-ninth percentile on the SAT. But Wang didn’t want to be seen merely as a bookworm—he was an accomplished member of the speech-and-debate team, and he had co-founded his school’s math club. He played the piano and performed in a choir that sang with the San Francisco Opera, and at Barack Obama’s first Inauguration.
The following spring, Wang was rejected from all the Ivy League universities he had applied to, except the University of Pennsylvania. (He made the wait lists at Harvard and Columbia, but was eventually turned down at those schools, too.) He was devastated, and wondered what more he could have done. Then he started thinking about all the impediments that no amount of hard work could overcome. Some of his classmates who had got into these schools, he thought, had less impressive credentials than his. But they were Hispanic and African-American. Had he been rejected because he was Asian?
More @ The New Yorker
My daughter just got an 100 on one of her test in Linear Algebra and she was telling me how 2 Hispanics behind her were saying back things about her in Spanish. (Assume they aren't getting a curve now)
ReplyDeleteWhy the hell in America do we need to promote non-worthy races? Promote the best is the best way going forward.
Promote the best is the best way going forward.
DeleteCongratulations and absolutely.
"Promote the best is the best way going forward."
DeleteAbsolutely.
Back when I graduated from college, women and minorities were getting offers left and right while whitebread - i.e., me - got nothing. I'll concede that I was not "Mr. Personality" but then, like many in a STEM field, I was a classical introvert.
ReplyDeleteI know, for a fact, I had more experience and higher grades than most of those women and minorities (sometimes they were both). How do I know this? Because I helped them write their resumes... since mine was, to cite one of the career center people, an "exemplar" for how a resume should be written.
, an "exemplar" for how a resume should be written.
DeleteGood deal.
The only reason this story has ANY traction is due to the fact that the aggrieved party is non-white. My niece and nephew both applied to the Ivy League around seven years ago and both were turned down, especially my nephew. Hell, they did everything but laugh in his face and who gets to decide who gets in the door? Oh that's right, the same religious minority that cried foul when the WASP's (Do we even have any of them anymore?) did the same exact thing to them around eighty or so years ago. Now they've been doing it to other groups for the last few decades and have gotten away with it with impunity and when someone calls them out on it, they trot out and hide behind an unfortunate episode that occurred in Europe during the Second World War and screech, "This is how it starts, it's happening again!"
ReplyDeleteI'm sorry but those of us who are of European descent have had enough of this tactic and I for one will thoroughly enjoy watching these self-interested, self - important lightweights hoisted on their own petard.
I'm sorry but those of us who are of European descent have had enough of this tactic and I for one will thoroughly enjoy watching these self-interested, self - important lightweights hoisted on their own petard.
DeleteMe also.
Apparently (((we))) live rent-free in Anonymous' head.
Delete:)
Delete