"scarce" resources, college and sexism
And then there's this:
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/23/opinion/23britz.html
It's the sort of thing that makes it hard for me to imagine any world in which women, at least as a group, don't always lose.
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rackmount
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/23/opinion/23britz.html
It's the sort of thing that makes it hard for me to imagine any world in which women, at least as a group, don't always lose.
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*nod*
Re: *nod*
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Imagine trying to understand back in the eighteenth century, a world in which 95 percent of the population was not engaged in agriculture.
Imagine trying to understand back in the the thirteenth century, a world in which every man and women was a clark.
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Given the existence of various dating services and social networks on the Internet, how much does the male/female ratio on your campus impact the dating opportunities?
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I suspect one high female-to-male ratios turn students off is perception -- they all have ingrained privilege telling them that it's not a hard school, so not as good a school, if a lot of girls get in.
Thing is, though, if gender stopped being an issue for admissions, that perception would change pretty quickly.
So this is basically going "There's this problem, it's stopping us from admitting female students" without acknowledging that it's a problem that they are helping to perpetuate.
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The single most important thing is to go somewhere you feel at home and not to go into a huge mountain of debt for an undergraduate education. If you're part of the 99.8% of students who don't get into one of the five colleges whose mere name on a diploma matters, there are simply no other significant factors to consider. Admissions officers think there are but they're shilling.
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15 years after graduating, I feel grateful I didn't wind up going to one of the schools that mattered, because it's one less thing upon me that creates expectations about how I look, what I do, how I behave.
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Which ones they are, of course, depends on your field. Which many people don't know going in, even if they think they do. *sigh*
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There's some numerical data you can use to describe the school in a ranked fashion, what scores are required to get in, what percentage of applicants it admits, what their demographics are, how many graduates go on to get a PhD, what their incomes are like, etc. The problem is that people don't know how to read a chart so they're just going to look at who's number 13 and who's number 22 out of 50. Oh, that must mean Oberlin's better than Kenyon but not as good as Brown.
Except people from Oberlin have a notoriously hard time getting along with the general population (I'm one of them... its true) while the CIA recruits heavily from Brown. I think that's a little more important than who rejects more kids.
So I understand why admissions officers are going to try to sell each college on its own merits, but these are things you can't place on a graph.
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I went to a state school and ... don't really regret it. I'm debt free too!
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It's men.
Men are associated with prestige.
And women are associated with the lack there of.
Is this an eternal condition? Are men the only way to grant anything prestige?
How do we change it?
I also prefer operating in relatively gender-balanced environments (one of the reasons I love Doctor Who/Torchwood fandom), but that's because of my own identity issues (I think/hope) not because boys accord worth.
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?
Re: ?
Unless that was the analogy you proposed, in which case I misread you.
Lower Standards
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Uphold The Market!
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If you haven't seen it yet...
If not, the quick summary is "I like boys really, but I wanted to try kissing a girl, but it doesn't mean anything really, and now let me make a video with girls in lingerie having a pillow fight!" The premise is potentially touching, but the presentation is nauseating.
Here's a cover of the same damn song that almost makes me cry. It's lovely. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=skAMmX-D41Q
Re: If you haven't seen it yet...
http://www.out.com/detail.asp?page=1&id=25011
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Still, that raises an interesting point, doesn't it? Of saying that "elite" universities are somehow better than state schools? And that education there is somehow better than what those of us who didn't go to Harvard or Yale received,