Stanford to continue legacy admissions and withdraw from Cal Grants

152 hhs 277 8/9/2025, 12:54:09 PM forbes.com ↗

Comments (277)

thelock85 · 2h ago
If you reduce the choice to public funding vs wealthy alumni stewardship, and there seems to be no meaningful pathway to circumventing the current assault on public funding, then why should you alienate your wealthy alumni?

Obviously the situation is much more complex and nuanced, but this framing (amongst others I’m sure) seems appropriate if you are thinking on a 25,50,100 year time scale in terms of impact of your decision. The country is littered with public and private universities who made poor moral choices across the 19th and 20th centuries but I’m not aware of any institutions suffering long-term reputational harm (or threat of insolvency) as a result of those choices. (Then again, maybe it’s because the harm was swift and final at the time)

itkovian_ · 38m ago
These are some of the richest entities - forget about universities - just entities full stop, in the entire country.
adastra22 · 16m ago
Stanford’s endowment is less than $40bn.
downrightmike · 1h ago
The poor choices started in the early 90's when the SCOTUS decided that MIT didn't have to pay taxes as long as they gave enough charity discounts to students.

Everyone else jumped on it and abused the student loan system by jacking up tuition and then applying charity grants to basically all students. Leading to our current Student Loan crisis.

blackguardx · 58m ago
This is the first time I've seen this framing. Typically folks blame bloated admin and fancy dorms. Where can I learn more about this take on the student loan crisis.
lotsofpulp · 26s ago
The loan crisis is because US taxpayers provide blank checks to students with no underwriting.
adastra22 · 15m ago
Those are not incompatible statements.
runako · 31m ago
As I understand matters, it started in the 70s and 80s as states pulled back from funding public institutions. This funding was the mechanism which allowed public institutions to be affordable to families such that a person could pay for a year of public college by working in a grocery store over the summer.

MIT + the more expensive private colleges are effectively a rounding error in terms of number of students matriculating, but they do play in the same market and will price accordingly. But the big driver of what they can get away with is that a college like University of Tennessee is $35,000 annually, for a total ticket likely north of $150k. (Not picking on them, just chose a state at random.)

Worth noting that this is a deliberate political choice. At any time, a state could choose to return to subsidizing in-state college at its public institutions, perhaps in exchange for working in the state after graduation.

mixdup · 19m ago
>As I understand matters, it started in the 70s and 80s as states pulled back from funding public institutions.

Yes, absolutely this, and accelerating heavily in the late 00s after the financial crisis. In some states, especially for non-flagship universities, you can overlay the decrease in state funding and tuition increases and they're nearly the same line

Tuition explosion isn't all just the proliferation of assistant deans and VPs (although that is a problem, too), a huge portion of it is that public higher education is essentially public in name only these days

analog31 · 1h ago
I think a century from now, we'll look back on privatized higher education the way we look back on privatized health care: Something that evolved by a series of compromises, that society depends on, but that is perpetuating inequality while also gouging us and not making us healthier.

Ironically, the appeal of an "elite" university depends on the public image of the student body. The university has to manage that image through its admissions process. Any open criteria for "merit" will quickly turn the student body into a monocultural freak show. This would in turn diminish the public image of the university -- the exact thing that the students were hoping to benefit from.

decimalenough · 1h ago
> Any open criteria for "merit" will quickly turn the student body into a monocultural freak show.

So just to spell the quiet part out loud, what you're saying is that admissions based purely on merit would mean the student body would become entirely Asian, and this would be a "freak show" that's bad for the university's image?

brewdad · 1h ago
That’s certainly one possibility for “merit” but “merit” could mean lots of things. Stanford goes big into athletics. Perhaps merit could mean they’ll only take students who placed in the top 10 in their state in some athletic competition. Perhaps merit means if your parents didn’t attend, you won’t get in.

Merit doesn’t have to mean SAT scores.

moomin · 16m ago
It could mean many things, but you’d still need to explain the monocultural freakshow remark.
adastra22 · 14m ago
I think you injected a lot of assumptions in there.
zmgsabst · 1h ago
The same group in society has been lamenting “too many Jews” in higher education for generations — and has several Supreme Court cases against their discrimination.

Quotas to DIE have all been ruled to, in practice, amount to illegal discrimination on the basis of race, but some people truly believe Harvard and UNC were right to discriminate against Asians.

tyre · 1h ago
I think if you look at polling, people’s feelings on admissions is heavily influenced by whether the criteria helps/hurts them. Especially when it comes to students and parents.

Which makes sense. If it came to your kid, would you give up their spot at an Ivy for the “common good” (assuming you saw it that way)?

Or would your definition of what’s right/wrong change to fit the practicals of the circumstances?

Jensson · 38m ago
For a large majority purely numerical merit based wouldn't change what school they could go to, but it would make it so much easier for them to plan and know where they can go since now its no longer based on the whims of some random bureaucrats.

So most people would benefit, a tiny minority who currently unfairly get into elite colleges would be hurt.

tyre · 1h ago
which monoculture?

side note: “monoculture” and “freak show” seem incompatible. an entirely homogenous student body doesn’t sound too freaky

cameldrv · 54m ago
I think that's the trick. These university admissions committees are essentially choosing the ruling class for the next generation. What makes a good ruling class depends on more than just test scores and grades, so admissions committees look at other things the applicant has done, and at least they used to also do an interview with an alumnus. All of this is fairly gameable though, and the kind of person who would excessively game these metrics might not be person who they want to choose. Knowing that someone is the child of someone who already was admitted and indoctrinated into the values of the university is a pretty good signal that this person is more likely to be the kind of person they want to admit.

Now all of this runs into the same fundamental issue that any decision like this does, namely, that ideally you want everyone to have an equal chance, but also, you want them to do a good job in their role. Unfortunately, people, through no fault of their own, are born into different circumstances, and some are prepared, in many different ways, better or worse than others, and this strongly affects how well they will perform.

onetimeusename · 2h ago
> Stanford has considered alumni and donor status for academically qualified students in the past

I have an argument to make in favor of allowing legacy status for admissions. I am basing this on personal experience and some analysis of data done at similar schools when they were forced to release it due to lawsuits.

The way admissions works in the US now it has basically become a lottery for qualified students. We have more qualified students than we have seats at the top schools. The idea that there are some unqualified students who make it in only because their parents are alumni, at least at Stanford I have never seen. The top schools are all so competitive that they are all pretty similar and they would not do things to jeopardize their reputation or standing. So I think it's just not the case that there are unqualified legacy admits. At Harvard for example the legacy admits had higher SAT scores than the average admitted student which makes sense when you think about it. Children of alumni are probably better prepared for admissions.

So when choosing, Stanford might have to make a choice between two students with the same GPA, the same SAT score, the same interests, etc. and legacy status could decide it and I am ok with that. Building a campus network of people is a huge competitive advantage a school can have. You would be surprised how many people who are non legacy admits have pretty well known parents anyway or have parents who went to an extremely similar school. Singling out legacy admissions is not extremely meaningful and I don't think it's used to let in unqualified students at all.

tyre · 57m ago
> they would not do things to jeopardize their reputation or standing. So I think it's just not the case that there are unqualified legacy admits

This is known to be false. Development cases, where donor’s buy admission, are real. They’re limited, but universities do them regularly.

If you look at Jared Kushner’s case, for example, his parents weren’t even legacies!

If they keep this number small, like five per year, would it really dilute Harvard’s brand? I doubt it.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Development_case

ghaff · 2h ago
As I mentioned in another comment, the objective of elite schools is not to just admit 1600 SAT (or whatever the metric is these days). It's to admit "good" students and then to look at other factors. You have successful parents that went to the school isn't the only other factor but it's not a terrible one for both financial and other reasons. Neither is admitting students who didn't completely ace the SATs but also have other notable accomplishments.

No comments yet

bachmeier · 1h ago
> The way admissions works in the US now it has basically become a lottery for qualified students.

That's not the way I would phrase it. A lottery would mean the outcome is random. There is nothing random about it. They consider essays, extracurriculars, and income, and look for evidence of hardship, diversity, athletic ability, and leadership. 100% subjective, sure, but not random.

brewdad · 1h ago
For any student who meets the qualifications, it is essentially random. There is a process that seeks to find the best students but it is flawed in the same way the job interview process is. Plenty of exceptional applicants get rejected and more than a few accepted students don’t succeed at the level one would expect.
adastra22 · 12m ago
They do all that and then have 10x - 100x the students left in the pool. They can’t make offers to them all, so it ends up being mostly random in that final selection.

That’s why the person you are replying to said “qualified.”

runako · 18m ago
They consider all those factors and then aim for a mix. No admissions board wants a class of 100% track stars or 100% economic hard-luck cases or 100% rich kids, etc. But they are faced with a bunch of kids who meet the GPA etc. criteria and also fit into each of these buckets.

Result is it's effectively random for each qualified kid.

MengerSponge · 19m ago
But at institutions with sub 10% admit rates, it is random. It's not a uniform distribution because you can do things to help your odds, but unless your family has a building on campus or you're an olympian or something... admission isn't guaranteed.
cma · 2h ago
How about for schools that had racial segregation within living memory? Can't be an old legacy there if you are the wrong race. Even without formal segregation there was discrimination of some amount. Can argue it went both ways at different points with affirmative action programs but most schools with AA weighted legacy just as high.

I think it is best to do away with legacy admits especially because of racial history but also because it is a kind of nobility system, but that will make schools rely on government more right now which seems to be as bad for academic freedom and freedom to not fund genocide as the donor model.

telotortium · 1h ago
> How about for schools that had racial segregation within living memory?

Maybe if you’re a Boomer, although even by the time they were going to university, racial discrimination was rapidly being replaced by affirmative action. This is the 2020s - even though some problems from that era still haven’t been solved, brute forcing the solutions from back then won’t make them any better and has already produced a major backlash.

matthewdgreen · 1h ago
I’m not a boomer. I have kids who are in high school. Racial discrimination is very much within my living memory, obviously affected other parents in my cohort, and still exists all over the city I live in.
adastra22 · 11m ago
The word used was segregation, not discrimination.
telotortium · 49m ago
> Racial discrimination is very much within my living memory, obviously affected other parents in my cohort, and still exists all over the city I live in.

If we’re talking about Asians, I agree with you, as far as non-Bob Jones universities are concerned.

breadwinner · 8h ago
This seems reasonable. California doesn't want to subsidize the education of the privileged few who qualify as "legacy admission". And Stanford doesn't want to give up the financial support from alumnus.
globnomulous · 4h ago
> alumnus

Alumni. Stanford may care most about just that one alumnus, but my suspicion is that they care at least as much about other alumni and alumnae. :)

technothrasher · 4h ago
> Alumni.

Often "Alums" nowadays, as Alumni is traditionally male gendered.

peterfirefly · 3h ago
Alumni if there is even one man. Alumnae if there isn't. Alumnus/alumna for individuals. That's just how Latin works.
WalterBright · 3h ago
Aluminum works for me.
prasadjoglekar · 2h ago
Aluminium
RHSeeger · 3h ago
I don't think I've ever heard this. The alumni of the university has always, from my experience, been used to refer to everyone that graduated; gender playing no role at all.
dcrazy · 3h ago
It’s one of those “well actually” things that the Latin nerds would point out. So the Latin nerds who went into college administration decided to change it to be a clearly English derivation.
BobaFloutist · 6h ago
Yup. And you can think of legacy admissions as college "whales", people who pay full price for an advantage and subsidize the price for less wealthy students. It's absolutely an imperfect system, but it at least redistributes a little wealth along the way
HDThoreaun · 3h ago
Its not just about money. Having legacies at the school is what makes non legacies want to attend. If applicants didnt care about networking with the rich and powerful theyd go to caltech, the reality is that having connections to powerful people is the main value add undergrad at ivies provides versus upper tier state schools. Why would stanford ever get rid of their main value add?
cherryteastain · 1h ago
We know this argument does not apply in practice because tons of people want to go to top universities that do not consider legacy like MIT. Outside America, universities that regularly feature in global top 20 lists like Oxford, Cambridge, ETH Zurich and Imperial College London etc also do not do legacies and they also get tons of interest.
sahila · 2h ago
You're making big assumptions here regarding students desires to attend stanford. Ignoring everything else though, having two elite universities that cater to merit is better than one just for the sake of doubling the number of students.
HDThoreaun · 1h ago
> Ignoring everything else though, having two elite universities that cater to merit is better than one just for the sake of doubling the number of students.

Not for stanford. Its goals largely boil down to increase the endowment and create a powerful alumni network. Accepting legacies is a great way to accomplish both those things. This is the same reason schools give preference to athletes even though it brings down the schools academics. Competitive athletics requires skills that translate very well to the workplace(grit, teamwork) so successful athletes are likely to become successful corporate workers.

musicale · 2h ago
Interesting point. Elite universities offer a good education, a respected credential, and connections. Stanford is also a startup factory, being (not coincidentally) adjacent to Silicon Valley and containing a business school in addition to the engineering school.
HDThoreaun · 1h ago
What does stanford offer undergrads that berkeley doesnt? IMO access to legacies and the larger alumni network is about it.
musicale · 1h ago
Better faculty to student ratio (1:6 vs. 1:19). Closer proximity to actual Santa Clara (Silicon) Valley (and Google, NVIDIA, etc.) More NCAA championships and Olympic medals. Still leading in "big game" football series (though currently on a losing streak.) More Turing awards.

Not as many Nobel prizes - or elements on the periodic table - however. Berkeley (having many more undergrads) also has more alumni.

(But note for both schools that good researchers are not necessarily good undergraduate instructors.)

musicale · 6h ago
Stanford undoubtedly did the math and determined they would lose money overall (gifts are 7% of Stanford's income, tuition and fees 13%).

Boo-hoo, rich university loses money. Like the 21% Trump tax on endowment income, etc. Maybe they'll have to fire some useless, non-teaching administrators and build fewer country club dorms and luxury amenities, right?

But... Stanford would probably argue that admitting a single less-qualified donor child can cover the financial aid expenses of dozens of qualified students whose parents simply have less money. (Financial aid is 5% of Stanford's budget.)

If this is true, California's goal of banning legacy and (especially) donor admits could have an unintended consequence of reducing the number of qualified but non-rich students who will be admitted.

But... many gifts are restricted, you say! Buildings. Endowed faculty chairs. Particular research centers and programs. Specialized scholarships. Etc. Nonetheless, Stanford has to balance its budget, and even restricted gifts save money and allow them to shift dollars from one place to another. (Note debt service is 4% of the budget as well.)

ghaff · 4h ago
Universities definitely favor unrestricted gifts. But, to the degree that you make a restricted gift, you can be sure that there's often money shuffling in the background to the degree the gift is substantial.
musicale · 2h ago
edit/correction: 21% was the original proposal but it was reduced to 8% in the final bill that was passed
corimaith · 4h ago
If rich people stopped going to Stanford, Stanford will loose its reputation in a few generations.
g8oz · 34m ago
I think it works in the opposite direction. Rich parents basically buy admission for their mediocre offspring at a university made prestigious by the abundance of very intelligent but less wealthy students.
eli_gottlieb · 2h ago
>But... Stanford would probably argue that admitting a single less-qualified donor child can cover the financial aid expenses of dozens of qualified students whose parents simply have less money. (Financial aid is 5% of Stanford's budget.)

Sounds like an argument for taxing the rich, if they've got so much spare money they can carry dozens of other people's kids through school.

ivape · 3h ago
That 7% from rich people, where does it go?

Let’s say the school decides they have enough money without that 7%. They figure out they don’t need to be that rich. Does that mean they can’t do more institutionally or does it mean they can’t do more organizationally (which is just get bigger, more heads, more money)? What does it really mean for them to suddenly become ethical and say they don’t want that blood money anymore?

That’s what I’m trying to figure out. It’s a follow the money situation, and it’s important to figure out who is beholden to that 7% when it comes into their system. If we find out it’s the giant cafeteria building, then maybe we settle for a smaller one. But if we find out it’s making certain people fat in the pockets, then you’re on to something.

——

Aside, society should really start encouraging the most talented to consider the ethics of institutions they go to. Whether that be Palantir or Stanford. Legacy admissions is just straight unethical, and Stanford students need to protest this.

musicale · 2h ago
Stanford presumably determined that the loss of donation money would be greater than what they would have to spend to cover financial aid without help from Cal Grants.
ivape · 2h ago
You are not reading what I'm saying acceptingly. I am suggesting the math they did only helped them conclude they would have less money. It did not lead to a conclusion that they can't keep being an elite institution servicing and creating high level academics at fair prices while still being profitable and growing financially. Very roundabout way of suggesting they are greedy at their core.
musicale · 2h ago
"Follow the money" is a good point. Universities spend an enormous amount of money, and it's often hard to see what it's actually being used on. Stanford has so many administrative staff that they built a separate campus for them in Redwood City. https://redwoodcity.stanford.edu
dlcarrier · 8h ago
I'm okay with academia being an institution of the elite, as long as we stop pretending that their BS (or BA) will make everyone successful. We can't all be elite; that's not how that works.

Rich people are going to waste their time and money no matter what, but I didn't want them also wasting yours and mine. The man-hours and percent of the GDP (often paid for with taxes) we put into conflating cause and effect is absurd.

We dodn't need merit-base academia, we need merit-based employment that disregards elite and academic status.

SoftTalker · 4h ago
When a Bachelor's degree became a proxy for "can show up and complete assigned work" for employers that was the start of its decline as an academic credential.
WalterBright · 3h ago
> Rich people are going to waste their time and money no matter what

You don't become rich by wasting time and money.

DonHopkins · 1h ago
You do by wasting other people's time and money.
JKCalhoun · 8h ago
How likely is it we'll have the one when we don't even have the other?

We'll have neither, of course. The wealthy will always be able to pay for what they want — merit be damned.

wnc3141 · 8h ago
I agree that participation in the middle class shouldn't depend on borrowing six figures as a teenager. I dream of the day where any worker has economic security
musicale · 5h ago
"It is good sense to appoint individual people to jobs on their merit. It is the opposite when those who are judged to have merit of a particular kind harden into a new social class without room in it for others."

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Rise_of_the_Meritocracy

corimaith · 3h ago
When you are brokering deals with wealthy clients or executing trades with millions, the notion of trust is much more important than merit. And what better is a sign of trust that coming from the circles, and with nothing to stake but reputation?
delfinom · 4h ago
That's already happening with technical/trade/alternate school to career paths are rising up and some colleges are panicking with declining enrollment.

I am on a co-op board here in NY, pretty much all our young buyers the last 2 years are all gen-Z who went the non-college route and have saved up more than enough to put a downpayment on a home for themselves and have a mortgage instead of college debt.

fzeroracer · 5m ago
> pretty much all our young buyers the last 2 years are all gen-Z who went the non-college route and have saved up more than enough to put a downpayment on a home for themselves and have a mortgage instead of college debt.

Really? How much money did they start with versus how much they earned via working? This feels like a bit of burying the lede here.

dehrmann · 4h ago
How did they save for the down payment? The ROI for college isn't what it used to be, but there isn't a clear non-college path in the US, either.
SilverElfin · 4h ago
Legacy admissions and holistic (discriminatory) admissions should be disallowed as long as these universities receive public fundings directly or indirectly.
dgs_sgd · 1h ago
Yep, I think these two things can be true at the same time:

1. Admitting a certain amount of students based on legacy status is not necessarily a bad thing

2. A University should not be eligible for taxpayer funds if they have admissions like (1) or similar holistic criteria.

In a society as diverse as America I think 2 is a fair line to draw. And the universities with large and powerful alumni networks where legacy admissions are most relevant have the least "need" for public funds. They have huge endowments.

gotoeleven · 4h ago
Id be interested to read about some "holistic" admissions success stories. There must be by this point tons of examples of students admitted "holistically" who are now doing great things because of the opportunity they were given.
beezlebroxxxxxx · 3h ago
Most, if not all, Canadian admissions are holistic. All the universities are pretty easy to get into as long as you have the grades, especially for undergrad. As a result, for undergrad at least, no one really cares what school you went to.

From outside looking in, the American system has a hilariously unequal system. Certain opportunities are hoarded by an insanely small set of schools, almost entirely based on "prestige" and financial dominance. And it's this crazy arms-race/pressure cooker to get in. But once you're in, grade inflation is everywhere and people aren't actually working super hard. No one freaks out about admissions to "mid-tier" schools. It's entirely about a select coterie of schools who people rightly perceive as gatekeeping to an incredible extent.

None of the schools actually emphasize being accessible and hard to graduate from. The incentives are all weird and cater to a small elite population. The name on the degree is more important than earning the degree.

WalterBright · 3h ago
I dunno about other colleges, but Caltech you earned the degree. Many students dropped out because of the workload. There were a couple that were able to coast through, but they had IQs easily over 160.

They didn't do legacy admits as far as I knew.

But what it's like today, I have no information.

h2zizzle · 1h ago
I've heard MIT was similar. But their graduates have never had quite the prestige and easy in to influential circles as the boys (eventually girls, too) down the street.
only-one1701 · 3h ago
Thats the exception then; at Stanford all you need to graduate is a pulse.
VirusNewbie · 2h ago
In CS/CE/math/physics?
SV_BubbleTime · 2h ago
Walter, can you give a rough timeframe to go with that anecdote?
uranium · 1h ago
It was the same in the '90s. Something like a third didn't make it through in 4 years, although a long tail managed it in 5 or more.
WalterBright · 1h ago
A classmate dropped out in his sophomore year, and 10 years later asked to come back and finish. Caltech said sure, and aced the courses and earned his degree.

I asked him, were you smarter after 10 years? He laughed and said nope, he was just willing to work this time!

(Another gem about Caltech - once you're admitted, they'll give you endless chances to come back and finish. Your credits did not expire.)

One of my friends finally graduated after 6 years there. He endured endless students mumbling "7 years, down the drain!" as they passed by. (The line was from Animal House.)

WalterBright · 2h ago
late 70's
jjmarr · 3h ago
Assuming you work in tech, that's because the only school that matters is Waterloo and 90+% of Waterloo students move to the USA after grad.
darth_avocado · 2h ago
Almost all our Canadian hires have been at Waterloo at some point. Even when we do random resume pulls and interviews, Waterloo seems to have the most competent set of candidates when you’re talking about new grads.
dgs_sgd · 1h ago
> All the universities are pretty easy to get into as long as you have the grades, especially for undergrad.

The is partially true but leaves out an important difference between Canadian and American admissions. In Canada you are admitted to a particular major, not the university as a whole.

E.g. At the University of Waterloo, CS and some of the engineering majors can have < 5% admissions rate and are extremely merit based. At the same time, applying for the general Bachelor of Arts at UWaterloo is uncompetitive and very easy to get admitted.

darth_avocado · 2h ago
> But once you're in, grade inflation is everywhere and people aren't actually working super hard.

Clearly you’ve never enrolled in a EECS class at Cal

throwawaylaptop · 2h ago
I was #3 in highschool out of a 550 graduating class. I thought I was bright.

Went to Cal for mechanical engineering, and while I survived the engineering classes, the physics classes wore me out and the math classes were almost impossible for me. I barely made it out of there.

I honestly wish I went somewhere easier so that it wasn't a constant struggle to keep up and survive. I think I would have actually learned more.

yojo · 1h ago
I took a Math 1A class (intro to calc) at Cal where the prof turned his back on class at the start of the hour, then proceeded to mumble incoherently for 60 minutes while filling a chalkboard with equations. He’d turn back around at the end of the hour. Many students brought pillows. I learned literally nothing in lecture.

This professor wasn’t demanding, he was just making zero effort to actually teach.

Great researchers are not necessarily great teachers, especially for intro courses. Anecdotally, I think this is a common issue at “prestigious” schools.

darth_avocado · 2h ago
I know that feelings but be assured, it’s better to be mediocre when you’re surrounded by amazing people than to be the best in a place where no one cares. I can guarantee you learnt more than other places even if you don’t feel like that at the moment.
throwawaylaptop · 2h ago
I've had 20 years to think about this, and while it was always fun to get the positive vibes telling people I went to Cal, I still think UC Davis or SLO would have been better.

It's not like my only other option was to go to CSU East Bay, although I know people that built decent careers from there too to be honest.

SilverElfin · 1h ago
I’ve heard people say this about difficult colleges or degrees before, so you’re not alone. The push to make something overly hard can simply leave some capable people behind by not matching their style or pace of learning. But also I think some of the less famous universities simply care about teaching while the top ones leave that to random grad students and instead brag about their research credentials. The thing is, professors doing research doesn’t help students learning.
darth_avocado · 1h ago
I think all that matters is that most if not all professors care about teaching. And my experience at top universities has been that most still care about teaching and the grad students they need to rely on is because of the class size. There were definitely some that were basking in their own glory from the past, but those were few. Can’t tell about all universities, but I’d assume it’s the same everywhere. The reality is that given what it takes to become a tenured professor, you’re bound to have at least a few who generally suck at teaching.
h2zizzle · 2h ago
It comes down to the notion that America is a classless society being farcical. There has always been an elite that jealously guards their power and influence. Entrance into it - or the ersatz version that is the bourgeoisie - has always (along with immigration) been modulated based on what was most likely to preserve the existence of that elite.

And it's not a conspiracy; it just shows how much power that elite has, that they're able to make these things happen when they need them to. A sudden turn away from nativism and condoning of proto-anarchy when the black population (first slave, then free) threatened to upend the social order. Socialism lite (and more immigration, but only from preferred European nations) to head off full-blown socialism after capitalism first drove to excess and then blew itself up. Truman getting the VP spot. Bank bailouts (so many bank bailouts). Even the begrudging "opening" of elite institutions to Jews, blacks, Asians (staring down the barrel of their own, rival, institutions).

Anything to prevent their power and influence decentralizing in an enduring manner.

abeppu · 1h ago
Isn't the point that _all_ admissions from a range of institutions over a period of years (decades?) were "holistic" admissions, and thus basically all post-college success stories are holistic success stories? Further, _it's actively harmful_ as well as unfounded to post-hoc try to say that person X would _only_ have been admitted under a holistic framework.

In the same way, if up until last year, your company had any form of DEI, it's pretty toxic to point to any of your colleagues, claim that they were diversity hire and their success is a credit to DEI policies b/c that undermines them in a way that's impossible to provide evidence against.

The implication that "you were only <hired or admitted> because of a policy that gave you credit for <trait/circumstance>" can't have a factual basis unless you have all applications and notes from the admissions/hiring deliberation process, which the person in question almost certainly cannot.

materielle · 1h ago
This has actually been one of the ideas floated by regulators.

The idea is that merit based admissions is actually pretty complicated, so we can allow individual universities continue to experiment with their own implementations and approaches.

However, we can hold them accountable by grading them based on retrospective data.

m463 · 1h ago
Maybe the way would be to correlate all admissions with success, and add a feedback loop.

I read somewhere that people who graduated at the top of their class generally became average with respect to success.

Also, I suspect success has to be quantified, which might be hard.

gopher_space · 13m ago
> Also, I suspect success has to be quantified, which might be hard.

I wouldn't say hard. It's expensive, time consuming, and the people who can perform qual to quant conversions usefully need to have a foot firmly planted on each side of the subject matter fence.

More to the point, nobody's really interested in compiling this kind of data. Adding dimensions beyond income to your definition of "success" would result in e.g. revealing there isn't anyone from your school successfully practicing family law.

Spooky23 · 2h ago
This may not count as “holistic”, but my grand-uncle went to City College of NY when it was both open admissions and free. He had the equivalent of an 8th grade education in his home country.

He ended up with a BS in Chemistry, went on further academically, and eventually was the general manager of a big factory (I think for GE, but not 100% sure) in the 80s before being killed in a car accident.

There’s a million stories like this. Most debates about who is more “qualified” for what in this context boil down to subjective vibes about whatever people think. At best, it’s pride in Ivy League education, at worst it’s some racist nonsense about the “others” taking status and jobs away.

I went to a random state school that some would eyeroll at. Life has been fine, and I’m glad I didn’t waste my time pursuing some bullshit admissions process.

malfist · 4h ago
Seems reasonably. You and to discriminate? That's disappointing, but nobody is going to stop you, but the public tax dollars sure as hell shouldn't support your discrimination
corimaith · 4h ago
The entire notion of "elite" universities is discriminatory. If going to your average state university with high admissions was okay then there wouldn't nearly be as much drama.

If the elite colleges are not comprised of the rich and well connected it beats the entire point of an elite college.

wsgeorge · 3h ago
> If the elite colleges are not comprised of the rich and well connected it beats the entire point of an elite college.

Depends on how you define "elite", and I assume you mean some sort of hereditary or economic-class-based definition. But elite colleges could (and should) still work if they run on competency-based merit. I believe elite talent in as many fields of endeavour should absolutely be catered to.

> The entire notion of "elite" universities is discriminatory.

Well, when you put it that way, many things are discriminatory, for better or worse.

JumpCrisscross · 3h ago
> If the elite colleges are not comprised of the rich and well connected it beats the entire point of an elite college

The functional purpose of a meritocratic elite is to concentrate the smartest and most ambitious in your nation (in each generation) so they can cross leverage each other. This dates back to feudal societies switching to a civil exam system during Enlightenment. (Also in imperial China.) That’s a productive form of discrimination.

corimaith · 51m ago
I think it's the opposite actually. I think the moment you're consciously, systematically trying to optimize for "smartest and most ambitious" on a meritocratic basis is the point in which your respective field falls into decline and is relegated to slow, incremental improvements rather than revolutionary jumps. Primairly because "the smartest and most ambitious" are more about seeing that specific field as vehicle for wealth and prestige rather than actual passion. Many of the legends of the past were not good enough for the elite institutions of their time.

I mean really, it's the question of why this over preexisting patronage systems. And looking at the "achivements" of this so-called "meritocratic elite" this last century (especially in enshittification) leaves alot to be desired.

It's just one self-serving 1% attempting to ursurp another 1%. And they certainly aren't going to be solving your problems. They don't have the ability to solve the coordination problem, the housing crisis, involution, climate change and Donald Trump.

Jensson · 28m ago
> And looking at the "achivements" of this so-called "meritocratic elite" this last century (especially in enshittification) leaves alot to be desired.

That wasn't created by the meritocratic elite, that was created by the "preexisting patronage systems" where rich pays to get their kids influential credential so that they can continue to have outsized influence on the country...

> They don't have the ability to solve the coordination problem, the housing crisis, involution, climate change and Donald Trump.

The current system is what caused those, why do you think that is much better?

TrackerFF · 8h ago
I always found it wildly fascinating how US schools have things like legacy admissions, athletic scholarships, standardized admission test, admission letter, letters of recommendation, extracurricular activities, and what have you.

Such a contrast to other systems where for example your HS grades will count 100% - and similar "ungameable" systems.

breadwinner · 8h ago
Right. It is called holistic review. Originally invented to limit the number of Jewish people in top universities (not kidding)! Now being used to limit the number of Asians.

Elite-College Admissions Were Built to Protect Privilege

https://www.theatlantic.com/education/archive/2019/03/histor...

The new holistic admissions policy worked as intended, successfully suppressing Jewish admissions.

https://www.economist.com/united-states/2018/06/23/a-lawsuit...

The 'holistic' admissions lie - The Daily Californian

https://www.dailycal.org/2012/10/01/the-holistic-admissions-...

The False Promise of 'Holistic' College Admissions - The Atlantic

https://www.theatlantic.com/education/archive/2013/12/the-fa...

Lifting the Veil on the Holistic Process at the University of California, Berkeley - The New York Times

https://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/04/education/edlife/lifting-...

fvgvkujdfbllo · 4h ago
This is very eye opening. As a geek with strong academic background always felt cheated by the system.

My professor explained that academics alone is not enough for success in life. He explained that some of the smartest engineers report to average business majors in companies. And he explained that that I cannot get any scholarships with perfect GPA while my roommate, a B student, has scholarships because he plays basketball and will likely get in leadership role in early on. That is good for the university as their graduates are seen as more successful.

It was a hard thing to listen to but I accepted it. I wish he told me the truth though.

nradov · 3h ago
Certain types of management and leadership skills are learned more effectively in an elite sports team than in any engineering coursework. I think a lot of people who conceptualize the world in very rigid, rules-oriented ways fail to appreciate that.
hobs · 2h ago
Suuure, but in my experience you get the meathead who makes a sports analogy every time something needs to be done.

Had to listen to someone talking about "humping it across the line" this week.

tjs8rj · 2h ago
This only seems confusing to people who valorize intelligence as the most valuable trait one can have. What really matters is the impact you can have on others lives: making them a lot of money, saving them a lot of time, making them happy, etc contributing to them or addressing their needs

Being smart is valuable, but it’s only one ingredient among many. You need to be able to communicate with others, take risks, work hard, have empathy, be a creative problem solver, etc

Being a brain with a body attached is not enough and that’s good

no_wizard · 2h ago
This reminds me of a documentary I watched some time ago, I wish I could remember its name. This is what I remember about it:

The entire premise was following 2 people, one guy barely graduated community college, the other was incredibly intelligent. Went to an elite university, got a masters really young, and I believe was a member of Mensa.

The difference was in other areas. The first guy had a lot of persistence and didn’t stop when things got hard. Ended up becoming a very successful person, married with kids, had their own business.

By contrast the other guy despite being legitimately one of the smartest people in the world, simply withered into obscurity, had trouble maintaining gainful employment, relationships etc. A very stark contrast to the first person.

I realize the point of a documentary is to highlight extremes but I think it does say something about the relative value of intelligence as it correlates to successful outcomes

adastra22 · 6m ago
I’d be interested if you can remember this documentary’s name. I want to show it to my kids.
bachmeier · 1h ago
The problem I have (full disclosure: I'm a professor) is that those things have nothing to do with a university. If they're doing non-academic things, the elite academics of the university are irrelevant.

But then that raises the question of why they want to go to an elite university. Well, obviously, because being able to pass as a good student does matter.

WalterBright · 3h ago
Just being smart won't get you anywhere.
adastra22 · 4m ago
It will get you into Mensa.
flappyeagle · 3h ago
He told you the truth
mgh2 · 3h ago
Aside from "success", it is very reasonable to want to admit "well-rounded" or "balanced" individuals as net pluses to society.

I heard the lack of balance in the Bay Area: "wierdos, tech bros, etc.". A geek can contribute either very positively or very negatively to society (ex: tech CEOs, unabomber, etc.),

Maybe too young to judge at university admissions, but still a reasonable proxy (another topic).

falcor84 · 3h ago
But a massive number of the bay area "weirdos" seem to come from elite schools; or is my frame of reference not representative?
mgh2 · 3h ago
Maybe is just the concentration of technical talent (usually introverts, home buddies), whom put less emphasis on social skills.
tzs · 17m ago
Counterexample: Caltech uses holistic admissions and no one has found any signs of it limiting Asians.
rayiner · 3h ago
I don’t think that’s the whole story. The Ivy League are WASP institutions, and WASP culture always highly valued “well rounded” students and looked down on people who single mindedly perused an end. Back in the day, they didn’t need to screen for this explicitly, since it was already universal in the applicant pool. They just needed a test to sort out the smart ones from the dumb ones. When the applicant pool changed, holistic admissions became a way to maintain that cultural trait.

You see the same thing with asians today. The competitive-admissions high school I attended went from. 30% asian to almost 70% asian. There was a backlash, almost entirely from very liberal white people. I don’t think any of them disliked Asians per se. But they wanted to preserve a certain culture in the school and all the Asians led to a change in the culture.

oa335 · 2h ago
> WASP culture always highly valued “well rounded” students and looked down on people who single mindedly perused an end

Citation please.

rayiner · 1h ago
eli_gottlieb · 2h ago
> The Ivy League are WASP institutions, and WASP culture always highly valued blah blah blah

Ok, screw that and screw the Ivy League and the WASPs with it.

rayiner · 1h ago
> Ok, screw that and screw the Ivy League and the WASPs with it.

I understand the sentiment and sometimes share it. But I’m also sad to recognize that while elite asians like me can excel within the systems created by WASPs, we probably wouldn’t have created such systems ourselves.

What other group in history has created a system so fair that they were replaced-without being conquered—within the very institutions they themselves created? My dad was born in a village in Bangladesh and my brother went to Yale and is an executive at J.P. Morgan (two of the WASP-iest institutions in America). WASPs are a minority in these institutions now. This sort of thing basically only happens in Anglo countries.

Good reading: https://www.nytimes.com/2018/12/05/opinion/george-bush-wasps...

abeppu · 1h ago
> created a system so fair

I think that's really begging one of the important questions here. _Is_ the system fair now?

The system clearly wasn't originally fair (when elite schools excluded women, people of color, etc).

They became more open after decades of struggle driven in large part from the outside, and helped along by the GI bill, as well as a broader shift towards getting more public funds.

The demographics have changed, but to the degree that it's more fair, is that because WASPs created them that way, or because women and other racial groups changed society more broadly?

rayiner · 31m ago
It’s critical to distinguish between being open to outsiders when you have the power to exclude them, versus advocating in your own interest to be included. Everyone advocates for their own inclusion when they have no power—that’s just human self interest. But such advocacy can’t create a fair system, by definition. Minorities and immigrants exist everywhere and advocate for themselves. But most societies don’t allow them to advance. Uyghurs in China can say whatever they want, but it won’t make a difference.

WASPs were unusual in creating systems that saw openness to outsiders as a virtue, and then actually giving up their own power to allow others into the institutions they built. The first black Harvard student was admitted in 1847. Two Japanese students got a degree from Harvard law school in 1874. But if you look at societies where African and Asian people have the power to exclude, those places aren’t very open to outsiders.

MPSFounder · 2h ago
I reject this. Refugees such as myself (for I was one as a kid), and many disenfranchised people would never have been able to become accomplished without this "hollistic" review you loathe. Asian and Jewish kids today can game the system. Instead of workign summer jobs like the rest of us, their parents can enroll them in private summer school and they get to rehearse full time on those tests you seem to favor. There is a reason we should consider the beyond. Grades and tests can be gamed by those who can afford to do so. I will take a refugee from Vietnam or Syria, a black kid from Detroit, or the child of a single mom who overcame adversity ANY day of the week over a rich Cali boy of Asian or Jewish descent who benefited from this system. While my experience is anecdotal, I think those on here who criticize the hollistic approach (and merge it with FOXNEWS crap like DEI, and I will add, coming mostly from WASPs, who were NEVER affected by it), have no idea what they are criticizing. America has always been about giving an equal footing. I proved myself in the business world, and those who had perhaps more music lessons and more standardized tests than I did, are currently employees at companies making mediocre careers. So if you are a young reader of this comment, and regard this nonsense like what breadwinner is espousing as normal, know that myself and many others stand for the holistic admission over the gamed system that today favors the rich. Stay curious, ask others for help (I will always lend a hand to any disenfranchised person), and while some doors will shut, you will find an opportunity you can seize. Most importantly, don't accept this crap. Your story is important, and accomplishments are not a game of numbers. If it was, China would be dominating us in many sectors, yet their contributions to much of STEM is mediocre at best. It is eclipsed by nations like France or Germany, 1/10th the size. Your story is so much more. Those in power seek to keep you out, by favoring a perfect test score so their offspring, lacking in ingenuity, can memorize and regurgitate. That's never the case in the business world, and rest assured it is not the case in the sensible one either :)
rayiner · 2h ago
> Asian and Jewish kids today can game the system.

This is just a cope. Poor Asians outperform in standardized metrics as well. New York’s selective admissions high schools, for example, are dominated by asians but have almost half of students qualifying for free or reduced price lunch.

To another example, comparing Asian kids and Hispanic kids raised in the bottom quantile of the income distribution, the Asian kids are over three times more likely to end up in the top income quantile as adults: https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2018/03/27/upshot/make-y...

MPSFounder · 2h ago
This is not the perception I heard. People from SE Asia are welcome to comment on this (and they would provide a better perspective than I can) but I know several Cali people of Flipino or Vietnamese descent whose parents are not wealthy surgeons, and they also favor the holistic approach. It also becomes a problem of numbers. Hispanic and Asian kids are the fastest growing denominations in the US. It is very likely that many of them are recent immigrants and are not wealthy. Of course, I am not saying that having a sad story in and of itself is a hall pass. All I am saying is many comments here state that focusing SOLELY on grades and tests is fair, despite the fact that is not true. I went to a Top 5 college. I was not rich. I grew up with a mom that saved ice cream buckets to reuse them. I saw many rich kids' siblings take entire summers off to study and plan their applications. Whereas kids where I grew up in Detroit held summer jobs at country clubs, ice cream shops, and mall stores to help with bills. How are standardized tests fair with this context in mind? I am getting heavily down voted. I will say this. I was a white kid, whose parents were not wealthy. I was a refugee. And I am in favor of the holistic approach. I think it speaks volumes on here when rich white guys who are typically progressives line up with Trump policies on this matter (the other big one being Israel). I think this is where you take a hard look in the mirror, and question whether what you believe is right. I am not arguing further on this topic. I am a living experience of it. Reducing entire applicants to those metrics that are believed on here to be objective is reductionist, and I promise you, the most accomplished engineers and founders will not come from that pool of applicants you worship.
rayiner · 2h ago
I’m not talking about perception I’m talking about statistics. There’s lots of poor asians—they are the highest poverty rate group in NYC—and they outperform on standardized metrics as well. Moreover, putting aside that the data shows test prep has limited benefits, you don’t have to be “rich” to prep for standardized tests: https://www.city-journal.org/article/brooklyns-chinese-pione....

> I know several Cali people of Flipino or Vietnamese descent whose parents are not wealthy surgeons, and they also favor the holistic approach

Asians are heavily propagandized to support affirmative action.

steele · 2h ago
Detroit has Black, Asian, Jewish, etc kids of all backgrounds working summer jobs - just like every other diverse major city. Guess you were a refugee fleeing Russian bot hate farms.
eli_gottlieb · 2h ago
That's a lot of words for petty racism. France and Germany don't do holistic admissions or use racial criteria, and of course for historical reasons don't have Jewish quotas either.

But go on and tell us about all the scholarly achievements of the countries who do use ethnic quota systems for their university admissions.

MPSFounder · 1h ago
Jewish quotas were removed decades ago. In fact, today, many donors and beneficiaries of the legacy system are Jewish. Today, the disenfranchised are not Jews. In fact, Jews are among the richest ethnic group in the US (look at their median household income). There is a reason many deans got fired from Ivy leagues when they attempted to protect free speech. It is because Ackman and most donors are Jewish, and their threats could make a dean bark on command. I imagine you are still living in the 60s. Most of the disenfranchised in the US today are blacks, Hispanic, SE Asians, and refugees. Half of the billionaire class in these United States today are Jews... So your argument about quotas is ridiculous. Europeans were not allowed education under the French monarchy. We can go back further in fact. Or look at different settings (Ghaza children being denied food and education?). Ridiculous reasoning on your part.
eli_gottlieb · 1h ago
You're the one insisting we need to reduce the number of Asians and Jews at universities. I'm the one saying admissions criteria should be racially and ethnically blind -- not to mention that the universities should drastically increase the size of their freshman classes to keep up with population growth. Go on and cry more about how a quota system isn't keeping some groups down to benefit the groups you favor.
devmor · 2h ago
I don't know man, my parents were so poor that we lived in a tent some summers and I still managed to score among the top on standardized tests.

Maybe you're just not as intelligent as you think you are, so you're looking for someone to blame and settled on ethnic biases.

MPSFounder · 2h ago
Maybe I am not. But then again, maybe you are just academically inclined. I was responding to the ethnic argument the OP posted. Just becuase you tested well does not make you intelligent buddy. Any user here is welcome to compare you and I's accomplishments. I am willing to share my Linkedin with a 3rd party, you do the same. And theyy come up with a verdict. Here is a tip btw. I shared my opinion, you shared yours. Insulting my intelligence makes it no wonder you lived in tents. It is disrespectful. I guess life has yet to kick vulgarity and lack of class out of the tent boy, did it?
rayiner · 8h ago
High school grades in the U.S. aren’t standardized and aren’t reliable. A standardized test like the SAT is the strongest predictor of college success: https://www.reddit.com/r/Sat/comments/1alp6vh/the_evidence_i... (collecting evidence)
olalonde · 3h ago
In Quebec, grades are normalized using a statistical formula that factors in how well students from your high school tend to perform in university[0]. This means an average student at an "elite" school could end up with a similar score to a top student from a weaker school.

[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R_score

morkalork · 3h ago
Wow, interesting. Do students take that into account when selecting which CEGEP to attend?

I don't know how it is in Ontario now, but when I went through HS there university admissions were your top-K grades for the last couple of years and they didn't factor in which school you attended. There were no shortage of private/alternative high schools in Toronto that catered gaming that system with lax workloads and inflated grades.

ghaff · 4h ago
I took a grad marketing class once with a business professor who studied this sort of thing. GMATs rather than SATs but same idea. Basically GMATs mattered more than anything else especially metrics such as letters of recommendation that were basically worthless.

I knew the director of admissions somewhat at an elite school and he said that they basically put a couple of quantitative metrics (like SAT) on one axis and read essays and considered other metrics like interviews on the other axis for diversity before that term became popular.

The upper right more or less got in, the lower left didn't, and then they debated the middle ground.

mpyne · 3h ago
There's a reason the military kept using the ASVAB even during the worst parts of COVID pandemic. ASVAB is a very solid predictor of success in training, and in Navy experience it's predictive value generally correlates with with how academic/technical the training pipeline is.
derbOac · 4h ago
That paper is pretty misleading and flies in the face of most peer-reviewed research (I don't know that journal, for what it's worth).

My guess is because it was focused on those attending elite institutions:

"In their paper on admissions to highly selective colleges... students at each of the schools in this analysis... Students opting to not submit an SAT/ACT score achieve relatively lower college GPAs when they attend an Ivy-Plus college..."

My guess is the meaning of a high or low GPA versus standardized test changes quite a bit when you have groups very highly selected based on a wealth of other information.

The Dartmouth report has always frustrated because they, along with that other paper, selectively present conditional means rather than scatterplots, hiding the variability around points to make things look more predictive than they are. Means by predictor level are almost useless without knowing the conditional variance for each predictor level. They're basically deliberately pretending that there is no error variance in the prediction equation.

Meta-analyses suggest that both standardized test performance and GPA predict later performance. For example:

https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/10627197.2015.99...

In some literature, GPA is superior, and others, testing.

There are other studies from decades ago showing that when standardized tests are temporarily removed from admissions (e.g., due to a court ruling), it has almost no influence on outcomes of admitted students later, suggesting admissions committees are able to select comparable students without tests.

I'm not saying tests are horrible and should be omitted, I just think people really overstate their predictive utility and it causes a ton of problems down the road.

ghaff · 2h ago
Basically standardized tests (and GPAs--however corrected) are both good predictors. Depending upon the institution's objectives, other factors may play in as well though they may not correlate that well to GPA in university which may or may not be a good thing depending on your perspective. My personal opinion in that it doesn't really matter past a certain point. (You don't want people to flunk out but the objective isn't really to get good university grades.)
siva7 · 4h ago
So? In many countries high school grades also aren't standardized and counts 100% for admission. The system still works reliably and not worse than in america.
sokoloff · 2h ago
“Not worse” in what sense? Is there a Stanford/MIT/Caltech/Harvard/N-others of equivalent global prestige/regard in those countries?
Mountain_Skies · 4h ago
Can you quantify that claim?
orochimaaru · 4h ago
The SAT isn't strong enough to predict anything. It can generally be answered by someone in their sophomore year at college or even their freshman, depending on what level of courses they are taking.

The problem finding a hard enough test with as little human intervention for assessments. Because human intervention brings with it subjectivity. This subjectivity was manageable when there weren't so many people applying for top schools (e.g. in the early 1900's). But right now its not.

SAT/ACT/GRE are no indicator of success. What this "study" is merely proving is that schools may have regressed in their rigor for grading hard courses.

malfist · 4h ago
Why does it matter if a college student, after three years of education, can do well on the entrance exam? Isn't that a given?
peterfirefly · 3h ago
It should be. I don't think it is, especially not among the favoured parts of the student population (athletics, legacies, "disadvantaged", "minorities").
adastra22 · 8m ago
HS grades are quite gamble—-the high school wants to show off better admissions stats and so gives out easy A’s.

This is not a hypothetical btw, this really happens.

WalterBright · 3h ago
I was the valedictorian in my high school. I did nothing to earn it, never did any work, and wound up at Caltech grossly underprepared. It took me over a year and a half to figure out how to work and study.

Admissions required a triad - top grades, top test scores, and something significant in extra-curricular activities. And finally, an interview. Bomb any of those, and you're out. I was rejected by MIT because of the interview.

ghaff · 2h ago
I think it depends on the school at the time. I got rejected by one school probably because I didn't have a varsity letter and had a so-so interview. I got accepted to at least two others that were at least as "good" at the time.

There's a lot of luck of the draw when you're applying to schools with a pretty low admittance rate.

I joke with someone I know pretty well in my alma mater's alumni office that I'd probably never get in today and they smile and follow it up with an "oh well, you're fine." :-) And they're not unhappy that I'm an alumnus. 3 people from my school's 59 person graduation class got in; certainly would never happen now.

WalterBright · 2h ago
I found out years later that I was a marginal candidate, and ironically it was the interview that made the difference.
ghaff · 1h ago
Which is the luck of the draw thing. If you're on the bubble for whatever random reasons, a decline or accept on even a marginal measure because you did/didn't click with someone can make the difference.
WalterBright · 1h ago
I was well aware of the vagaries of chance, which is why I applied to the top 10 engineering universities in the country. I was accepted by Dartmouth, Johns Hopkins, and Caltech. As a backup I had ASU.

I knew nothing about Caltech, and by amazing luck it was perfectly suited to what I wanted and my personality.

For a while now, I've been running the D Coffee Haus monthly meetings, where myself and fellow nerds meet and talk about nerdly stuff. It's as much fun as the same thing at Caltech.

ghaff · 48m ago
I don't remember what schools I applied to in general. But I didn't get into Dartmouth and did get into MIT which was something of shocker. Did go to the latter as an undergrad (though had never visited the campus) and have stayed involved. Started a non-profit at the former as a grad student at Dartmouth and still involved so all good. At the time, didn't seem to make a lot of sense to go to west coast (or UK) in part for schools as air travel was still relatively expensive.
huevosabio · 8h ago
Standardized tests are the least gameable. HS grades are pretty poor proxy given the wide range of quality in HS.
darth_avocado · 2h ago
HS grades are a joke. All it takes is an unforeseen medical emergency or a teacher who hates you to tank your future. Thank god for standardized tests, otherwise I’d be living a very different life.
WalterBright · 3h ago
These days, people game them by claiming a disability so they get extra time.
sokoloff · 2h ago
I doubt the typical students scoring 1540+ have time pressure on the SAT. Sure extra time might help someone get from 1400 to 1440, but it’s not going to get you 1400 to 1600.
WalterBright · 2h ago
40 points is 40 points.
morpheos137 · 8h ago
Other countries probably have a more centralized, standardized schooling system. In the USA schooling is at the local and state level.
throw0101d · 8h ago
> Other countries probably have a more centralized, standardized schooling system.

Which is basically what the SATs are:

* https://satsuite.collegeboard.org/sat

* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SAT

DiogenesKynikos · 4h ago
This is what Baccalaureates, Abitur, Gaokao, etc. are: much more standardized high-school final exams, used as a metric for university admissions.
SilverElfin · 4h ago
They had that previously in some places. California universities used to not have affirmative action (quotas) but they apparently removed consideration of test scores to help achieve the racial composition they felt was “correct” in another way, since it was resulting in a skew towards whites and Asians in their view. Not sure what the process is today.
diggernet · 6h ago
Having HS grades count 100% is a really bad idea. Not because of anything about the schools, but because HS age isn't representative of people's abilities. I had terrible HS grades due to a complete lack of interest. After growing up a little and getting my act together, I got A's in college. Thank goodness they didn't base my admission on HS grades.
cortesoft · 4h ago
Athletic scholarships and standardized test admissions are way less gameable than HS grades
odo1242 · 4h ago
Yea, especially since the people who get the highest grades in HS, in the US where you have a decent amount of latitude to pick your classes, are generally just the students who refused to take any hard class.
liquidpele · 4h ago
Or the ones that do 10+ faked “AP” classes over the summer and transfer those credits in. Not kidding.
WalterBright · 3h ago
In my high school, the honors classes gave an extra point for your GPA average. So the "easy A" classes weren't quite the ticket.
daemonologist · 2h ago
My high school gave an extra half point for honors and a whole point for AP classes*, but my experience was that regular classes were easier by _far_ more than that (at least in cases where all three levels were offered). I had disliked biology in middle school and separated from the "AP crowd" to take honors environmental science instead, and it felt at least two or three letter grades easier than the other AP sciences.

Of course the top tier students were likely to achieve an A regardless, so the more challenging courses would look better. For me though it probably would've been optimal to choose easier classes; admissions might not even be aware that a more difficult option was offered.

* If I recall correctly though, colleges were usually interested primarily in the unweighted GPA.

peterfirefly · 3h ago
flappyeagle · 3h ago
That’s not gaming that’s cheating.
trenchpilgrim · 8h ago
If HS grades were used for admissions in the US, it would incentivize college-bound high schoolers to avoid challenging classes like AP classes, advanced STEM classes, history classes beyond state requirements, etc.

The optimal strategy would be to take the easiest classes required to graduate, since there's no national authority to normalize grades across classes.

IncreasePosts · 7h ago
You just give multipliers for advanced classes then. That's how my high school calculated GPA - if you took all "A" level classes your max GPA was 4.0, but if you took AP classes and aced them you could end up with a 4.3 or something like that
BobaFloutist · 6h ago
That's how almost all highschools and colleges do advanced classes, Honors classes are graded on a 4.5 scale and AP classes on a 5.0 scale (and also count for college credit so you get to skip some intro classes after admission).

This, of course, leads to yet more grade inflation. Hard to compete with a >4.0 student when your school doesn't even offer advanced courses!

JoshTriplett · 4h ago
Standardized tests work much better than high school grades, and also handle cases like young students who go to university at or before the "normal" age of a high school student.

The SAT and GRE aren't perfect, but they're a massive help to students who would otherwise be outside the normal path. Get a high score on the SAT, and nobody cares whether you went through traditional K-12.

elashri · 4h ago
> GRE aren't perfect

This is understatement, GRE being required for STEM postgraduate studies was always university requirement for all not something the STEM department would want.

One can argue that the quantitative part have a point but for the language part, you must be kidding me. Unless you are going to English literature it is just plain stupid (maybe even if you study literature).

DiogenesKynikos · 4h ago
For native speakers of English, the language part of the exam is just seen as a general test of intelligence.

For non-native speakers, it's just a test of how well they learned English, and nobody in admissions expects them to score as well as native speakers.

Beyond this, there are subject-specific GREs. They're far from perfect, but they're more uniformly comparable across all candidates than grades are.

elashri · 4h ago
Have you actually taken the exam or looked into a sample test?

There is no intelligence in most parts, it is just you memorizing a lot of words that you will never hear or use. Maybe you are confusing different parts of the exam.

> For non-native speakers, it's just a test of how well they learned English, and nobody in admissions expects them to score as well as native speakers.

That's different test/s. Programs will require TOEFL/IELTS for that purpose.

liquidpele · 4h ago
Ungameable… lol. Take a look at Asian countries for what happens when you rely only on grades… cheating becomes the norm since numbers are all that matter.
DiogenesKynikos · 4h ago
Cheating is not the norm in Asian countries.

The real downside is that school is insanely competitive, students study incredibly long hours, and they feel intense pressure to perform well on their exams.

The upside is that the students are much more serious about their studies than in the US, in general.

gopher_space · 2h ago
Forced to TA students like this in the US, both foreign and domestic, I'd say the real downside is that this produces incredibly brittle individuals. "Failure isn't an option" is not an attitude compatible with pushing your own boundaries or even just life in general.
corimaith · 4h ago
But social mobility for serious kids is much easier in the United States than elsewhere. It's also in USA that going to your local state university or community college isn't a large barrier to your future career, and transfers are common.

And when it comes to the levers of power, connections are still what defines future leaders in Asia, not grades. This entire idea of "serious students" are ultimately just a bone to throw to the masses.

sahila · 3h ago
> But social mobility for serious kids is much easier in the United States than elsewhere.

This is an unrelated point, is your contention that the US is better off with unserious students? Social mobility / wealth accumulation for the masses does suck in other countries but it's great that people are still seriously motivated by schools. It's a big reason those students immigrant to the US and companies here hire those people in masses.

corimaith · 34m ago
>This is an unrelated point, is your contention that the US is better off with unserious students?

It's that America has the capacity to fully absorb it's talent so it's not a problem. The reason why other countries have more is because they don't have the capacity to absorb them due to less opportunities so the competition is higher. Many of those "serious" students in China or India will still end working in factory jobs and delivery drivers because they weren't good enough.

>It's a big reason those students immigrant to the US and companies here hire those people in masses

Eh, if they were hiring domestic students I wouldn't say there would be much of difference. Unless if you are running a startup, most of these "serious" students will be just writing basic CRUD apps. Value comes from experience here, not talent. Well, if I was American though, I wouldn't bother competing againt millions of desperate Chinese or Indians for opportunity cost anyways, I'd be going more into law or finance. And those fields are less diverse.

snapetom · 18m ago
I was just about to comment on Asian countries and mobility.

If you do grades only, there's also the phenomenon where getting into the right Kindergarten-level school determines your entire school career. In many countries, your current school is a significant factor of your next school.

Imagine not getting into the right Kindergarten having life-long consequences.

tjs8rj · 2h ago
And yet the innovation density is lower
typeofhuman · 8h ago
HS grades are gameable. Just look at public highschools across the US. A significant percentage of graduates can't read. And the policies won't let teachers fail or hold-back students so they cook their grades to push them through the system.

The ratione behind this was "ending the school to prison pipeline." They saw the correlation between drop out rates and incarceration and thought they could reduce the latter by gaming the former.

This is why you see a lot of college dropouts from that corpus because they can't make it. They were lied to.

SoftTalker · 4h ago
Also not that uncommon for the star HS quarterback to be functionally illiterate yet passing all classes with the required GPA for athletics participation.
watwut · 4h ago
To be fair, the absurd thing is that in order to have a career in sport he excellent at, he needs to go to university. Not being university material is stupid reason for not being able to do sports professionally.
SoftTalker · 4h ago
Agreed. And it's becomming more common in the US pro leagues to see players who only completed high school. But the majority still play at least a year or two at the college level. It's a filter, and D1 college sports is a big business in its own right.
philwelch · 4h ago
High school grades are gameable, probably moreso than athletic scholarships or standardized tests.

Legacy admissions are part of the hereditary class system. The reason people go to elite schools isn’t just to receive an education, it’s also a status symbol and networking opportunity. If you do manage to get accepted by an elite school purely on merit, that’s not just an opportunity for you personally, it’s a chance to pass that status down to your children.

But yeah the rest of it is bullshit (and often a fig leaf for discrimination).

LudwigNagasena · 8h ago
I thought most countries just do general country-wide admission tests?
PeterStuer · 5h ago
No, at least not for all subjects. I think over here medicine still has an admission test. Engineering used to have one long ago.

All the rest, there are very lenient high school diploma requirememts, and no crazy costs like the US. All that want can basically attend, until they fail to pass a few times.

rayiner · 8h ago
Props to California for doing this. Stanford showing its true colors here.
renewiltord · 4h ago
Yes, perfectly reasonable to pull state funding for private enrichment. Now, all we have to do is get rid of the racism in “holistic admission” and use a demonstrably fair system like performance on standardized tests.
MPSFounder · 2h ago
You are delusional.
throwawaymaths · 15m ago
i wouldn't be opposed to legacy admits if they were required to pay full tuition and judged to a higher standard: the legacy admit must have both a higher gpa, and sat score than the inbound class average.
hulahoof · 13m ago
I’m not from the US so apologies if I miss something that seems obvious, but why should they have a higher standard instead of the same standard?
adastra22 · 9m ago
You didn’t miss anything. That was a bizarre statement.
tines · 13m ago
So being legacy puts you at a disadvantage with no advantage?
adastra22 · 10m ago
Then you are against legacy admits as your policy would actively discriminate against them.
wombatpm · 39m ago
The GI Bill fundamentally changed college.

The Vietnam draft with College deferments broke colleges and universities.

Now every white collar job requires a degree - because every boomer overseeing those roles thinks it’s necessary.

genghisjahn · 8h ago
Pick up a copy of Palo Alto and read thru that. Lots of interesting Stanford history there.
alecco · 9h ago
Stanford became Harvard.
onetimeusename · 2h ago
They all became each other. The second (or maybe first) most popular degree at Harvard now is CS. Students apply to all the Ivy+ schools and a few backup options, maybe 20 in total, and you pick the best one you get accepted to. All the students have done the same things, they have very similar GPAs and scores, they all mostly went to Ivy feeder high schools, they do all the same extra curriculars like math and CS club and teaching underprivileged kids to code. It's all the same. Maybe they are more easily distinguished for grad school.
jen20 · 8h ago
Was there a point in recent memory where it wasn’t? As a non-American I’d always considered them to be the Oxford and Cambridge (respectively) of the US.
andrewl · 8h ago
Some would say Harvard and Yale are the Oxford and Cambridge of the US. But we’re a big country, and we have a lot of schools. Many lists of top schools include these, alphabetically ordered:

Columbia University, Cornell University, Harvard University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Princeton University, Rice University, Stanford University, University of California, Berkeley, University of Chicago, University of Pennsylvania, Yale University

But this discussion of rankings reminds me of a quote from John Allen Paulos:

In fact, trying to convert a partial ordering into a total one is, I think, at the root of many problems. Reducing intelligence to a linear ordering—a number on an IQ scale—does violence to the complexity and incomparabilities of people’s gifts.

JKCalhoun · 8h ago
They're West coast. "Elite" schools in the U.S. are typically East coast (old monied).
chasd00 · 2h ago
Just want to point out that “old money” in the USA is a different thing than “old money” in Europe. The whole USA is only around 350 years old.
EFreethought · 1h ago
Some of the American old money came from European old money.
simianwords · 9h ago
It’s interesting to see that merit best admissions is pushed from both sides of political spectrum - legacy admissions and DEI.
DragonStrength · 9h ago
You’re close. The issue is we can’t discuss class, so they look for all sorts of other analogs which they can get the wealthy folks on board with. DEI is acceptable to the wealthy because they ultimately see less of a threat there than from a person of the same race from the South or Midwest. In the workplace, the female Stanford legacy can still be underprivileged then thanks to gender versus the white male from a poor state with a land grant degree.
simianwords · 8h ago
both DEI and legacy are going away so it works in your favour.
mc32 · 9h ago
I think legacy admissions is only supported by the elites —be they leftists or rightists. Normal leftists and normal rightists don’t support legacy admissions (pay to play). I think the vast majority of people would support fair admissions (GPA + something else that signals academic aptitude).

Most people would detest the extracurricular noise that some institutions use because often only people with money can afford their kids doing those things and two they are bullshit things. By most people I mean potential students such as those that in great numbers end up in state schools or community colleges.

NewJazz · 9h ago
How do you compare GPA across different schools?
acomjean · 8h ago
Isn’t that why standardized tests like the SAT/ACT… exist?
mc32 · 9h ago
I think you can gauge that from the historical performance of students from those sources. Of course, there is a lag as schools either improve or dilute grades.
NewJazz · 1h ago
Hmm. Yeah it is a hard problem to solve. It is basically a mass interviewing system.
simianwords · 9h ago
I agree with you but I meant both democrats and republicans are pushing merit based admissions. Gavin Newsom against legacy and Trump against DEI.

On the point people vastly prefer GPA - I don’t agree because people on the left prefer DEI and affirmative action.

rayiner · 8h ago
I think even most democrats oppose it: https://manhattan.institute/article/study-finds-most-democra.... Though unfortunately, it appears that what swings democrats from support to non-support is learning that it hurts asians, not just white people. :-/
impossiblefork · 7h ago
You can't be a leftist and support legacy admissions. You can be a right-liberal and support legacy admissions, but even the mildest mild-mild leftism would reject that kind of thing.
philwelch · 3h ago
If you look at the political tendencies of the elite universities that themselves practice legacy admissions, those tendencies are overwhelmingly to the left of the American political center. I know it’s popular to make a “no true Scotsman” argument against anyone to the right of Mao Zedong but it’s silly.
NewJazz · 3h ago
I think you are failing to distinguish individual elements of the universities you are commenting on. Administration and faculty are very different people. Admin need faculty for prestige, but faculty need admin for funding. Are a majority of prominent faculty members advocating for legacy admissions?
philwelch · 37m ago
You’re implying that there’s some crypto-right-wing people somewhere in the university and that these people are solely responsible for legacy admissions, but you’re not even willing to state this absurd implication, let alone provide any evidence for it.
impossiblefork · 3h ago
So by what definition of leftist thought could this possibly be okay?

Wikipedia has one (ideologies that seek social equality and egalitarianism), which this is clearly incompatible with. It's certainly unacceptable to socialists, communists, anarchists, syndicalists or social democrats.

Liberals are not leftists. Liberals are mostly inviolable-property + free-trade type people.

philwelch · 21m ago
Soviet Russia was not an egalitarian society, it was a brutal dictatorship governed by an effective ruling class of party members. Mainland China is the same. If that’s your standard of “leftism”, you’re drawing the line somewhere to the far left of any self-proclaimed communist party that has ever held power in any country. This is clearly absurd.
kbelder · 4h ago
And yet they don't.
impossiblefork · 3h ago
Liberals are not leftists. They are not egalitarians and they are not really for social equality.

Allowing universities legacy admissions is a position so far to the right that I don't think any political party anywhere outside of the US propagates for it. There isn't a social democrat in Denmark or something who has vaguely leftist view but who also believes that universities should admit people based on their parents having gone there.

philwelch · 14m ago
If anyone really favored social equality they would support abolishing the elite universities entirely. Anything short of that still produces an identifiable class of people who attended these institutions, and it’s the existence of that class in the first place rather than its partly hereditary nature that runs counter to social equality.
Gimpei · 3h ago
A compromise would be to double the undergrad class size while limiting legacy to something less than or equal to what it is today in absolute terms. Many more deserving students would get and Stanford would get to keep its cash cow. But of course that would entail Palo Alto to let it expand, which it very much wants to do. And good luck with that.
ndgold · 2h ago
I mean this means that the alumni are worth more money than the state awards, right?
flappyeagle · 3h ago
The best way to do this has always been to accept a ton of students and weed out a big percent of them in intro courses.

Have the basic grades and test scores? Ok welcome to CS1 where 2/3 of you will not make it thanks for playing

lo_zamoyski · 9h ago
Here's another perspective.

Let's say Harvard's admission were to become largely based on social status rather than merit. You could say "so be it", but let it be known that that is what Harvard is. Being one thing while advertising another is lying and the greatest offense.

A positive side effect is that perhaps we won't fetishize Harvard as much and keep insisting that one must get into Harvard. You don't. Harvard's brand depends on you thinking you do, of course.

The current model of academia in the US and elsewhere is wretched. Obscene tuition is one thing. The failure to educate is another. Universities got out of the education business a while ago. Universities are focused on jobs, that's the advertising pitch, which is not the historical and proper mission of the university. So you end up with institutions that are bad at both.

So if these "elite" schools lead to a disenchantment with merit, I see a silver lining. It could provide the needed impetus and motivation to distribute education more widely in smaller colleges with a greater clarity and focus on their proper mission (e.g., Thomas Aquinas College [0]) while creating a robust culture of trade schools. The majority of people do not need a college education! And frankly, it's not what they're looking for.

Germany does something like this. Fewer people go to university there, and they have a well-developed system of trade schools.

Furthermore, you could offer programs that allow students at colleges to take classes in these trade schools.

Let's stop trying to sustain a broken model. The time is ripe for educational reform.

[0] https://www.thomasaquinas.edu/

PeterStuer · 4h ago
If as you hypothesise universities are focussed on jobs, how do you explain the countless utterly useless degrees they keep pumping out en mass?
Cornbilly · 9h ago
DEI for rich mid-wits is fine for anyone else it’s Communism.
burnt-resistor · 10h ago
No surprise. C'mon, they host the Hoover Institution and celebrities and rich people pay coaches to get their kids in. It's a power funnel racket.

PS: I'm an ex-Stanford FTE.

georgeburdell · 9h ago
People went to jail for those bribes. It’s not a legal tactic to begin with
orangecat · 4h ago
They went to jail because they bribed people who were not authorized to accept bribes instead of the people who were (with the latter people charging much more, of course).
lotsofpulp · 9h ago
Just because the bribes were too small. If they were large enough to help build a building, then they become legal again.
energy123 · 8h ago
It was because the bribes benefited a small number of administrators instead of being equitably distributed across administrators
rahimnathwani · 7h ago
No, it's because the money went to individual employees directly, rather than being received by the institution.
lotsofpulp · 6h ago
While I was being glib, that is an insignificant detail in the context of this post about legacy admissions.

The point is you can gain admission via some nebulous definition of merit, some combination of merit and knowing someone who gained admission before, or paying for admission.

Also, while the “institution” receives the money, I guarantee some people (the highest admins and their friends - fund managers, construction contractors, etc) gain more than most others (e.g. adjunct teachers and students).

ivape · 3h ago
You’re defining a country club. Every layer of our society grosses me out.
IncreasePosts · 7h ago
Has Thomas Sowell ever commented on legacy admissions? I can't find anything but I imagine he would not be a fan, just like he isn't a fan of affirmative action.
rr808 · 9h ago
Legacy is better than people think. The undergrad academics at T10 universities really aren't anything special. People want to go because of the connections with wealthy & well-connected students, but then complain when wealthy well-connected students get a easier ride. You fill Harvard of Stanford with only people with 1600 SATs will turn them into places you dont really want to go to.
jfengel · 9h ago
When you prefer legacy students, you perpetuate the kind of discrimination in effect when their parents and grandparents were admitted.

Perhaps this is better for the school as a whole. But when that argument was made to help students who were previously discriminated against, people swore that didn't matter, because all discrimination is bad.

Legacy students are the easiest way to see that discrimination is not over yet. There are many others but this one is really transparent. There are many potential ways to deal with it, but "end discrimination for them but not for me" isn't a good one.

WillPostForFood · 4h ago
Stanford undergrad is only 22% white so this clearly isn't happening in practice.
musicale · 6h ago
> When you prefer legacy students, you perpetuate the kind of discrimination in effect when their parents and grandparents were admitted.

Universities will likely claim that legacy and (especially) donor admits bring more money into the university, which in theory allows them to increase overall economic diversity (and likely social and demographic diversity as well) of the student body by admitting a larger number of qualified students under a need-blind admission policy.

jfengel · 4h ago
Many of these universities have vast investment funds. Expanding would indeed allow them to provide more education, but that does not appear to be their goal.
musicale · 4h ago
Expanding need-blind isn't the same as overall expansion.

Many universities have adopted need-blind admissions (not including donor admits), eliminated or reduced student loans, and/or expanded undergraduate admissions - all efforts that support economic diversity.

Stanford (for example) implemented need-blind for domestic student admissions (but still not international), and largely eliminated (or at least reduced) undergraduate student loans. Undergraduate class size seems to have expanded from ~6500 (?) in 1983 to ~7500 today, and may continue to expand slightly:

https://news.stanford.edu/stories/2025/04/president-levins-r...

However, it's worth noting that Stanford acceptance was above 25% for the class of 1979 (vs. 3.6% for the class of 2029.) Application growth has drastically outpaced admissions and class growth.

https://irds.stanford.edu/data-findings/undergraduate-admiss...

Additionally, administrations have generally expanded much faster than the undergraduate student population.

corimaith · 3h ago
But it's the people here that want more access to these elite circles.

Placing the notion of discrimination in the context of demanding access to an elite circle is like demanding access to a banquet while denouncing the recipe. It's incoherent.

ryandrake · 8h ago
Yes. Imagine if you could get an elite Wall Street or Consulting job based significantly on who your dad is. That would be unfair, discriminatory, and otherwise pretty terrible, except for the already elite and wealthy. Oh, wait...that already happens, and it's indeed terrible in all the ways you would predict. This really needs to be cracked down on, but the rich and powerful will always support it.
burnt-resistor · 7h ago
The rich having their way is the blueprint for a third-world country.
CrazyStat · 8h ago
> The undergrad academics at T10 universities really aren't anything special.

This surprised me when I went from my decent but not great-by-ranking (generally ranked in the 50-70 range) undergrad university to a top 10 ranked university for grad school. The undergrad students weren’t noticeably smarter, nor did they work harder on average. They were more ambitious and more entitled. Cheating was rampant (pre-LLMs, I expect it’s even worse now) and professors mostly just didn’t care. The median household income at the top 10 school was more than double what it was at my undergrad school.

That was an enlightening experience.

kelipso · 3h ago
Definitely has the opposite experience going from an around 100 ranked university to an around 20 ranked university. Maybe it depends on the department but I noticed a massive difference in the students, difficulty of classes, how well the professors taught in multiple classes in multiple departments. There were exceptions but there was definitely a general trend.
SoftTalker · 4h ago
Ambition and a sense of entitlement (manifest destiny) built America.
ethan_smith · 9h ago
Research from Opportunity Insights shows legacy preferences reduce social mobility while multiple studies find no evidence legacy admits enhance campus culture or alumni giving beyond what could be achieved through need-blind admissions.
WillPostForFood · 3h ago
The same Opportunity Insights found that legacies were more qualified than typical applicants.
yieldcrv · 9h ago
Top universities don’t exist for social mobility, that is merely happenstance that the people that want to pay have gatekept access to the purse by having attended university.
bumbledraven · 9h ago
> You fill Harvard of Stanford with only people with 1600 SATs will turn them into places you dont really want to go to.

Isn’t that basically Caltech? They had a 3% acceptance rate in 2023, the lowest in the nation. https://www.usnews.com/best-colleges/rankings/lowest-accepta...

rr808 · 9h ago
Yes sure there will be some elite purely academic places, but Caltech so small its a blip, most high schools are larger.
BobaFloutist · 6h ago
They'll turn into Cal, where people absolutely want to go.
lo_zamoyski · 8h ago
> The undergrad academics at T10 universities really aren't anything special. People want to go because of the connections with wealthy & well-connected students, but then complain when wealthy well-connected students get a easier ride.

Indeed. And the irony is that even when poorer students do attend, they find that the expensive habits of the richer students exclude them from mingling with them in many cases.

(Fun fact: one reason for uniforms in Catholic schools was to eliminate wealth from the picture.)

PeterStuer · 5h ago
Which was always absurd as there's no less vestimentary affluence signaling in uniform high schools than in any other.

The signs may be more subtle and sublimized to a careless outsider, but in the schools those signals are obvious and stand out just as blatent as anywhere else.

IncreasePosts · 7h ago
You couldn't even do that - only about 500 people get a perfect SAT score per year.
burnt-resistor · 7h ago
It sounds hyperbolic and they probably mean high school students with 1500+ SAT-I, 5 AP everything, and other community leadership achievements.

Meanwhile, there's the ultra-talented people IIT turns away every year. Maybe the smart thing would be to also pick up international students as second-chance admits rather than chase away tourists, students, researchers, and workers?

PeterStuer · 5h ago
US universities have always thrived on full price paying foreigners, especially at the graduate level. They also make for very cheap and docile TA's
burnt-resistor · 7h ago
People with 1600 SATs tend to be ultra-productive, down-to-Earth individuals. (My high school had dozens of them.)

Legacy creates an closed, self-reinforcing, entitled aristocracy.

What kind of society do you want?

kappi · 9h ago
Stanford has become legacy + LGBTQ only for undergrads. Even their math departments are filled with only them!
yieldcrv · 9h ago
Exactly, that Austrian woman that tried to get rid of all her wealth found out that its impossible because even if she’s at £0 she knows too many people that will support her ideas, drive too much publicity to her causes, and food, shelter, board seats, academia, and everything else is always accessible. The path doesn’t have to be forged.

Universities were always finishing schools for the elite, for like 1,000 years its been that way, and the best ones in the US are here for that since before the country was incorporated, here since almost half a millennia ago!

The last 80 odd years of dealing with the lower class and proletariat at all is a footnote and will be an experiment of folly deep in a university archive for the next 1,000 years as they merely revert to the mean.

Every problem that universities have go away when they go back to their roots. Its the corporate and public sector that tied access to having a degree from these places, that’s not the university’s problem.

And to your point, correct, if the proletariat were only surrounded by themselves they would not want to be there.

xmonkee · 8h ago
This is such a bizarre and gross take. Yes our history is a history of class struggle. But history does progress. For thousands of years we were supposed to be property of kings so shall we mean revert to that?

I went to an “elite” public university in India which has a sub 1% acceptance rate. It was mostly extremely smart and driven middle class kids from incredibly diverse social backgrounds. Everyone had the time of their lives. And almost everyone now (20 years later) is doing incredibly well in life. They are doing startups, public policy, research, tech leadership etc. There is zero legacy admissions. And yes there is a network effect, of course. You can count on the friends you made at uni, but not because they inherited the influence. You don’t have to lick boots to have a good life.

PeterStuer · 5h ago
The 'roots' were places of intellectual amusement, only for the very affluent idle and the clergy.

Ain't nobody else had time for that.

justinhj · 8h ago
They really shouldn't get public money then
yieldcrv · 6h ago
I agree, this article is relevant to my interests because Stanford is doing just that! At the state level

Looking forward to inspiring consensus to do it at the federal level voluntarily too. The federal administration catalyzing that won’t be controversial after its done.

The current board members at these schools just need to be inspired by another school.

W Stanford

perfmode · 8h ago
Everyone at Stanford and Harvard has 1600s. even the legacies