cal83dls79 said:
Thanks. But you blew many opportunities to blow up on SC. Should have let the misinformation continue.
She was born in 1951 and earned her B.A. in 1976.
cal83dls79 said:
Thanks. But you blew many opportunities to blow up on SC. Should have let the misinformation continue.
okaydo said:socaliganbear said:
She was the one unc forced out after that last scandal right?
3. She's a University of California alum.
4. This will be the third year in a row that her school will face Cal football.
TheFiatLux said:okaydo said:socaliganbear said:
She was the one unc forced out after that last scandal right?
3. She's a University of California alum.
4. This will be the third year in a row that her school will face Cal football.
The only people who refer to themselves or are refered to as University of California alum are people who went to The University of California, which is in Berkeley. Nobody is considered and "alum" of the "system."
Well played, both of you. Well played.okaydo said:TheFiatLux said:okaydo said:socaliganbear said:
She was the one unc forced out after that last scandal right?
3. She's a University of California alum.
4. This will be the third year in a row that her school will face Cal football.
The only people who refer to themselves or are refered to as University of California alum are people who went to The University of California, which is in Berkeley. Nobody is considered and "alum" of the "system."
HAAHAHAHAHAHAAHAHAAHAHA
TheFiatLux said:okaydo said:
The only people who refer to themselves or are refered to as University of California alum are people who went to The University of California, which is in Berkeley. Nobody is considered and "alum" of the "system."
And now we have Olivia Jade blaming her mother for the breakdown of her career (whatever that was). This is getting to be soap opera laughable in so many ways if it weren't so pathetic. I guess what goes around comes around.bearister said:
A wiretap brings privilege and helicopter parenting to the fore in the college admissions scandal
https://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-parents-admission-cheating-20190321-story.html
"But experts in parenting say the win-at-all-costs attitude can have a pernicious effect on a child. When they try to clear the way for their children's success, parents are essentially saying to their kids that they can't do it on their own, a stance that may block the path to successful adulthood."
..."When we do too much for our kids, and we tell them what to do every step of the way, they never build up a tolerance for frustration," she said. "The problem is that kids who can't be frustrated don't learn as well."
OdontoBear66 said:And now we have Olivia Jade blaming her mother for the breakdown of her career (whatever that was). This is getting to be soap opera laughable in so many ways if it weren't so pathetic. I guess what goes around comes around.bearister said:
A wiretap brings privilege and helicopter parenting to the fore in the college admissions scandal
https://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-parents-admission-cheating-20190321-story.html
"But experts in parenting say the win-at-all-costs attitude can have a pernicious effect on a child. When they try to clear the way for their children's success, parents are essentially saying to their kids that they can't do it on their own, a stance that may block the path to successful adulthood."
..."When we do too much for our kids, and we tell them what to do every step of the way, they never build up a tolerance for frustration," she said. "The problem is that kids who can't be frustrated don't learn as well."
Fyght4Cal said:Well played, both of you. Well played.okaydo said:TheFiatLux said:okaydo said:socaliganbear said:
She was the one unc forced out after that last scandal right?
3. She's a University of California alum.
4. This will be the third year in a row that her school will face Cal football.
The only people who refer to themselves or are refered to as University of California alum are people who went to The University of California, which is in Berkeley. Nobody is considered and "alum" of the "system."
HAAHAHAHAHAHAAHAHAAHAHA
There's little in any chance this passes as proposed, but boy would this devastate college athletics in the state.Quote:
"The legislation proposed Thursday included a measure by Assemblyman Kevin McCarty (D-Sacramento) that would bar any special admission, also known as "admission by exception," to a California public college or university unless it had been approved by at least three college administrators, which could include the chancellor or president of the institution."
"Students admitted by exception at public universities would be allowed only if they were California residents and eligible for in-state tuition."
Oh my God. These legislators are imbeciles. Of course 99% of the problems were at private schools and 99% of this legislation would hit public schools. Who already ban legacy/ donor admission by the way. Yeah that makes perfect sense.ajm9191 said:
From LA Times: Responding to college admissions scandal, California lawmakers propose sweeping reformsThere's little in any chance this passes as proposed, but boy would this devastate college athletics in the state.Quote:
"The legislation proposed Thursday included a measure by Assemblyman Kevin McCarty (D-Sacramento) that would bar any special admission, also known as "admission by exception," to a California public college or university unless it had been approved by at least three college administrators, which could include the chancellor or president of the institution."
"Students admitted by exception at public universities would be allowed only if they were California residents and eligible for in-state tuition."
Though I can't recall where I heard or read this, quite a significant number of students from underrepresented groups enrolled at UC are admiited under this process. The special review includes foster youth, students from rural communities, skilled performers and creative prodigies, students facing significant hardships, and of course athletes.
FuzzyWuzzy said:This is liberal whataboutism. Two wrongs don't make a right.OneTopOneChickenApple said:
I always bring up this kind of stuff when people argue against Affirmative Action.
There is some amazing irony in this. People who go to an elite school like Cal, have success and have the audacity to want their children to have success. Where do you draw the line? Everyone has to go to the same high school? No tutors? Not SAT study courses? There is inequality in every society. Clearly, bribing someone is over the top. But it doesn't seem like this legislation deals with the substance of the Variety Blue accusations. Attacking donors (I don't have a dog in this fight, unless the actually allow dogs into Cal) who contribute and get kids into schools? If this happens at UC schools, it is minimal at best. This is a private school issue. More likely there is more political pressure to get politically connected kids in (and if pushed I can provide examples). What a bunch of hypocrites. Go regulate the private schools where this actually happens.GivemTheAxe said:FuzzyWuzzy said:This is liberal whataboutism. Two wrongs don't make a right.OneTopOneChickenApple said:
I always bring up this kind of stuff when people argue against Affirmative Action.
I have often analogized Affirmative Action to a situation where two kids are trying to make a track team.
Runner A has had all the advantages a trainer, top of the line running shoes, a great training facility, a dietitian, top of the line running and training equipment and plenty of time to practice.
Runner B has a beat up pair of heavy Converse tennis shoes, practices along the side of a busy two lane asphalt highway, he has a part time job and can train only on off hours and has irregular meal times.
Runner A runs the mile 10 seconds faster than Runner B. Who is the better qualified runner.
BTW Runner B also has to run wearing a 30-pound back pack
bearister said:
A wiretap brings privilege and helicopter parenting to the fore in the college admissions scandal
https://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-parents-admission-cheating-20190321-story.html
"But experts in parenting say the win-at-all-costs attitude can have a pernicious effect on a child. When they try to clear the way for their children's success, parents are essentially saying to their kids that they can't do it on their own, a stance that may block the path to successful adulthood."
..."When we do too much for our kids, and we tell them what to do every step of the way, they never build up a tolerance for frustration," she said. "The problem is that kids who can't be frustrated don't learn as well."
That's a great analogy for socioeconomic affirmative action, though it would fall short at being an analogy for race-based affirmative action.GivemTheAxe said:FuzzyWuzzy said:This is liberal whataboutism. Two wrongs don't make a right.OneTopOneChickenApple said:
I always bring up this kind of stuff when people argue against Affirmative Action.
I have often analogized Affirmative Action to a situation where two kids are trying to make a track team.
Runner A has had all the advantages a trainer, top of the line running shoes, a great training facility, a dietitian, top of the line running and training equipment and plenty of time to practice.
Runner B has a beat up pair of heavy Converse tennis shoes, practices along the side of a busy two lane asphalt highway, he has a part time job and can train only on off hours and has irregular meal times.
Runner A runs the mile 10 seconds faster than Runner B. Who is the better qualified runner.
BTW Runner B also has to run wearing a 30-pound back pack
wifeisafurd said:There is some amazing irony in this. People who go to an elite school like Cal, have success and have the audacity to want their children to have success. Where do you draw the line? Everyone has to go to the same high school? No tutors? Not SAT study courses? There is inequality in every society. Clearly, bribing someone is over the top. But it doesn't seem like this legislation deals with the substance of the Variety Blue accusations. Attacking donors (I don't have a dog in this fight, unless the actually allow dogs into Cal) who contribute and get kids into schools? If this happens at UC schools, it is minimal at best. This is a private school issue. More likely there is more political pressure to get politically connected kids in (and if pushed I can provide examples). What a bunch of hypocrites. Go regulate the private schools where this actually happens.GivemTheAxe said:FuzzyWuzzy said:This is liberal whataboutism. Two wrongs don't make a right.OneTopOneChickenApple said:
I always bring up this kind of stuff when people argue against Affirmative Action.
I have often analogized Affirmative Action to a situation where two kids are trying to make a track team.
Runner A has had all the advantages a trainer, top of the line running shoes, a great training facility, a dietitian, top of the line running and training equipment and plenty of time to practice.
Runner B has a beat up pair of heavy Converse tennis shoes, practices along the side of a busy two lane asphalt highway, he has a part time job and can train only on off hours and has irregular meal times.
Runner A runs the mile 10 seconds faster than Runner B. Who is the better qualified runner.
BTW Runner B also has to run wearing a 30-pound back pack
Grigsby said:
Classic- under ethnicity they list non-USA as an ethnicity. Pretty much sums up the value of a USCedumacion
For state schools, it can't, under current law, be defined by race. But I don't have a problem with merit being defined in different ways or for that matter essentially everything else you said. We do that whenever we go beyond strictly GPA and test score considerations. We often give preferences to many different types of students, such as athletes or those who showed leadership by say being their high school President. But the legislature seems to be saying your GPA is it unless you have a bunch of approvals (because we love more bureaucracy). Another piece of the legislation is no preference to children of DONORS OR ALUMS. That is you guys. So what they are saying Is your kids have to be reviewed separately to make sure there is no preference (whether you donate or not). Think an overworked admission officer wants to deal with that if your kid is even close to the border of being accepted? This isn't about racial preferences, this is about legislating a bias against your kids.GivemTheAxe said:wifeisafurd said:There is some amazing irony in this. People who go to an elite school like Cal, have success and have the audacity to want their children to have success. Where do you draw the line? Everyone has to go to the same high school? No tutors? Not SAT study courses? There is inequality in every society. Clearly, bribing someone is over the top. But it doesn't seem like this legislation deals with the substance of the Variety Blue accusations. Attacking donors (I don't have a dog in this fight, unless the actually allow dogs into Cal) who contribute and get kids into schools? If this happens at UC schools, it is minimal at best. This is a private school issue. More likely there is more political pressure to get politically connected kids in (and if pushed I can provide examples). What a bunch of hypocrites. Go regulate the private schools where this actually happens.GivemTheAxe said:FuzzyWuzzy said:This is liberal whataboutism. Two wrongs don't make a right.OneTopOneChickenApple said:
I always bring up this kind of stuff when people argue against Affirmative Action.
I have often analogized Affirmative Action to a situation where two kids are trying to make a track team.
Runner A has had all the advantages a trainer, top of the line running shoes, a great training facility, a dietitian, top of the line running and training equipment and plenty of time to practice.
Runner B has a beat up pair of heavy Converse tennis shoes, practices along the side of a busy two lane asphalt highway, he has a part time job and can train only on off hours and has irregular meal times.
Runner A runs the mile 10 seconds faster than Runner B. Who is the better qualified runner.
BTW Runner B also has to run wearing a 30-pound back pack
Ideally it would've great to have a society where opportunity is totally equal. But I am not espousing this.
Nor am I espousing simple racial preferences. As we have seen Dre's daughter had some major advantages despite her race.
Instead admissions offices should be able to take into account the obstacles that the applicant overcame in getting to where they are.
From what I have heard Cal admissions tries to do this to some extent.
"Merit" can be measured in different ways.
I know this is not a serious comment.Another Bear said:
While I doubt it, wonder if their accreditation will be pulled. When you get into major crimes, it seems a fair question.
Actually it is a serious question. USF had trouble like 15-20 years ago. They were put on sanctions and threatened to have their accreditation pulled. But yes, that' was about academics, not the business/money end...and money always talks.Bobodeluxe said:I know this is not a serious comment.Another Bear said:
While I doubt it, wonder if their accreditation will be pulled. When you get into major crimes, it seems a fair question.
America.
To say it again, USC is really at a whole other level in this scandal. This isn't some rogue coach. This was systemic fraud. They had the AD's office involved in this for God's sake. If that isn't "lack of institutional control" I don't know what is and if the NCAA has any interest in enforcing its rules they'll go after them hard.okaydo said:
wifeisafurd said:For state schools, it can't, under current law, be defined by race. But I don't have a problem with merit being defined in different ways or for that matter essentially everything else you said. We do that whenever we go beyond strictly GPA and test score considerations. We often give preferences to many different types of students, such as athletes or those who showed leadership by say being their high school President. But the legislature seems to be saying your GPA is it unless you have a bunch of approvals (because we love more bureaucracy). Another piece of the legislation is no preference to children of DONORS OR ALUMS. That is you guys. So what they are saying Is your kids have to be reviewed separately to make sure there is no preference (whether you donate or not). Think an overworked admission officer wants to deal with that if your kid is even close to the border of being accepted? This isn't about racial preferences, this is about legislating a bias against your kids.GivemTheAxe said:wifeisafurd said:There is some amazing irony in this. People who go to an elite school like Cal, have success and have the audacity to want their children to have success. Where do you draw the line? Everyone has to go to the same high school? No tutors? Not SAT study courses? There is inequality in every society. Clearly, bribing someone is over the top. But it doesn't seem like this legislation deals with the substance of the Variety Blue accusations. Attacking donors (I don't have a dog in this fight, unless the actually allow dogs into Cal) who contribute and get kids into schools? If this happens at UC schools, it is minimal at best. This is a private school issue. More likely there is more political pressure to get politically connected kids in (and if pushed I can provide examples). What a bunch of hypocrites. Go regulate the private schools where this actually happens.GivemTheAxe said:FuzzyWuzzy said:This is liberal whataboutism. Two wrongs don't make a right.OneTopOneChickenApple said:
I always bring up this kind of stuff when people argue against Affirmative Action.
I have often analogized Affirmative Action to a situation where two kids are trying to make a track team.
Runner A has had all the advantages a trainer, top of the line running shoes, a great training facility, a dietitian, top of the line running and training equipment and plenty of time to practice.
Runner B has a beat up pair of heavy Converse tennis shoes, practices along the side of a busy two lane asphalt highway, he has a part time job and can train only on off hours and has irregular meal times.
Runner A runs the mile 10 seconds faster than Runner B. Who is the better qualified runner.
BTW Runner B also has to run wearing a 30-pound back pack
Ideally it would've great to have a society where opportunity is totally equal. But I am not espousing this.
Nor am I espousing simple racial preferences. As we have seen Dre's daughter had some major advantages despite her race.
Instead admissions offices should be able to take into account the obstacles that the applicant overcame in getting to where they are.
From what I have heard Cal admissions tries to do this to some extent.
"Merit" can be measured in different ways.
What also bothers me is the legislation eliminates considering the SAT and ACT for admittance, which might be a good idea in most other schools go along, but they won't. Essentially every school considers test scores in the admission process. Why? According to a UT-Austin study colleges are relying on standardized test scores even more when making admissions decisions than they have in past years. One reason is that the number of applications at most top colleges is soaring. That's because more kids are each applying to more colleges. And with little increase in the size of admission staffs at most colleges, schools are using SAT and ACT scores to make a fast, easy way to cut the applicant pool. And colleges want a large applicant pool. The larger the applicant pool, the lower the acceptance rate and the higher the ratings.
There are something like 10 "optional" test schools, some with good reps, almost all private schools. Sounds like these colleges being more humane and open minded, right? But the UT-Austin study says at private schools it is really often used for legacy of donor kids with bad test scores.. Also, unfortunately, for athletes, the athletic scholarship rules of most conferences require the colleges to report and use test scores. But mostly, the schools are chasing rankings. Think about it. When a school declares SAT scores optional, which students report their scores? Only students with high test scores, which means the school can report higher test scores for admits, which means higher ratings. Selling exclusivity. This doesn't even get into the "superscore" stuff that schools like SC pull, taking the highest of your test scores, no matter how many times you take the test.
Why would these schools give any of this up? Which gets to the consequences of not reporting test scores - sinking ratings. These stupid rating agencies rely on the test data in evaluating a school. Are they going to change their rating system because the CA legislature says no test scores? NO, there just going to screw the UC schools even more.
Now maybe some of you don't care what Cal is rated, but when the ratings come out and Cal is like number 20 or something behind some obviously lesser school, many of you guys scream blood murder. Also, I thing the faculty cares. The may espouse lofty equality goals, but that doesn't apply when it comes to academic ratings and having the best and brightest do their research. Think that won't impact faculty recruiting?
There are a lot of other things that I object, but all my objections go away if the privates have to play be the same rules. Otherwise, our wonderful legislators are shooting the UC schools, and their alums, in the foot.
This is the same rationalization the wealthy use when they evade taxes. Jail time should be imposed to set their ethics straight.GivemTheAxe said:bearister said:
A wiretap brings privilege and helicopter parenting to the fore in the college admissions scandal
https://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-parents-admission-cheating-20190321-story.html
"But experts in parenting say the win-at-all-costs attitude can have a pernicious effect on a child. When they try to clear the way for their children's success, parents are essentially saying to their kids that they can't do it on their own, a stance that may block the path to successful adulthood."
..."When we do too much for our kids, and we tell them what to do every step of the way, they never build up a tolerance for frustration," she said. "The problem is that kids who can't be frustrated don't learn as well."
Yes the less obvious lesson the kids learn is: "you're not good enough".
But the more obvious and more direct lesson the learn is: "if you want sometng bad enough, it is not just OK but it is SMARTER to cheat to get it ".
"How do you dileneate if everyone is getting 4.0s?"Grigsby said:wifeisafurd said:For state schools, it can't, under current law, be defined by race. But I don't have a problem with merit being defined in different ways or for that matter essentially everything else you said. We do that whenever we go beyond strictly GPA and test score considerations. We often give preferences to many different types of students, such as athletes or those who showed leadership by say being their high school President. But the legislature seems to be saying your GPA is it unless you have a bunch of approvals (because we love more bureaucracy). Another piece of the legislation is no preference to children of DONORS OR ALUMS. That is you guys. So what they are saying Is your kids have to be reviewed separately to make sure there is no preference (whether you donate or not). Think an overworked admission officer wants to deal with that if your kid is even close to the border of being accepted? This isn't about racial preferences, this is about legislating a bias against your kids.GivemTheAxe said:wifeisafurd said:There is some amazing irony in this. People who go to an elite school like Cal, have success and have the audacity to want their children to have success. Where do you draw the line? Everyone has to go to the same high school? No tutors? Not SAT study courses? There is inequality in every society. Clearly, bribing someone is over the top. But it doesn't seem like this legislation deals with the substance of the Variety Blue accusations. Attacking donors (I don't have a dog in this fight, unless the actually allow dogs into Cal) who contribute and get kids into schools? If this happens at UC schools, it is minimal at best. This is a private school issue. More likely there is more political pressure to get politically connected kids in (and if pushed I can provide examples). What a bunch of hypocrites. Go regulate the private schools where this actually happens.GivemTheAxe said:FuzzyWuzzy said:This is liberal whataboutism. Two wrongs don't make a right.OneTopOneChickenApple said:
I always bring up this kind of stuff when people argue against Affirmative Action.
I have often analogized Affirmative Action to a situation where two kids are trying to make a track team.
Runner A has had all the advantages a trainer, top of the line running shoes, a great training facility, a dietitian, top of the line running and training equipment and plenty of time to practice.
Runner B has a beat up pair of heavy Converse tennis shoes, practices along the side of a busy two lane asphalt highway, he has a part time job and can train only on off hours and has irregular meal times.
Runner A runs the mile 10 seconds faster than Runner B. Who is the better qualified runner.
BTW Runner B also has to run wearing a 30-pound back pack
Ideally it would've great to have a society where opportunity is totally equal. But I am not espousing this.
Nor am I espousing simple racial preferences. As we have seen Dre's daughter had some major advantages despite her race.
Instead admissions offices should be able to take into account the obstacles that the applicant overcame in getting to where they are.
From what I have heard Cal admissions tries to do this to some extent.
"Merit" can be measured in different ways.
What also bothers me is the legislation eliminates considering the SAT and ACT for admittance, which might be a good idea in most other schools go along, but they won't. Essentially every school considers test scores in the admission process. Why? According to a UT-Austin study colleges are relying on standardized test scores even more when making admissions decisions than they have in past years. One reason is that the number of applications at most top colleges is soaring. That's because more kids are each applying to more colleges. And with little increase in the size of admission staffs at most colleges, schools are using SAT and ACT scores to make a fast, easy way to cut the applicant pool. And colleges want a large applicant pool. The larger the applicant pool, the lower the acceptance rate and the higher the ratings.
There are something like 10 "optional" test schools, some with good reps, almost all private schools. Sounds like these colleges being more humane and open minded, right? But the UT-Austin study says at private schools it is really often used for legacy of donor kids with bad test scores.. Also, unfortunately, for athletes, the athletic scholarship rules of most conferences require the colleges to report and use test scores. But mostly, the schools are chasing rankings. Think about it. When a school declares SAT scores optional, which students report their scores? Only students with high test scores, which means the school can report higher test scores for admits, which means higher ratings. Selling exclusivity. This doesn't even get into the "superscore" stuff that schools like SC pull, taking the highest of your test scores, no matter how many times you take the test.
Why would these schools give any of this up? Which gets to the consequences of not reporting test scores - sinking ratings. These stupid rating agencies rely on the test data in evaluating a school. Are they going to change their rating system because the CA legislature says no test scores? NO, there just going to screw the UC schools even more.
Now maybe some of you don't care what Cal is rated, but when the ratings come out and Cal is like number 20 or something behind some obviously lesser school, many of you guys scream blood murder. Also, I thing the faculty cares. The may espouse lofty equality goals, but that doesn't apply when it comes to academic ratings and having the best and brightest do their research. Think that won't impact faculty recruiting?
There are a lot of other things that I object, but all my objections go away if the privates have to play be the same rules. Otherwise, our wonderful legislators are shooting the UC schools, and their alums, in the foot.
UC schools will always lose ground on private schools because UCs are beholden to the whims if the legislature.
The other culprit is grade inflation. How do you delineate if everyone is getting 4.0s and everyone has high test scores.
The way high school should assess ability potential etc needs to be reworked so that there is distinction between Student X Y Z.
Testing helps somewhat, but you cannot get a true assessment of ability without delving deeper.
I've met plenty of grads, advanced degree people and PHDs from top public and private schools who great and school but were woefully uneducated in complex thought and cognitive processing.