Harvard's Secretive Admissions Process Unveiled in Court Documents

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 21. 10. 2018
  • Harvard’s admissions process has always been shrouded in secrecy, but a recent lawsuit is allowing the veil to be lifted. The WSJ’s Nicole Hong and Melissa Korn examined court documents to dig into some of the new findings. Photo: Getty Images.

Komentáře • 2,1K

  • @nmaurok
    @nmaurok Před 5 lety +2906

    A smart guy once told me "the US admissions process is just a glorified personality test" - now add racial bias into the mix, and the picture becomes more accurate

    • @sasshole8121
      @sasshole8121 Před 5 lety +8

      A smart guy said that.

    • @lStranger
      @lStranger Před 5 lety +66

      GravityTricks
      Besides the racial bias, aren't all job applications glorified personality tests? The main goal is often to get the employer to like you as an applicant. Some individuals get jobs just by knowing the right people (i.e. networking).

    • @alisaroman9748
      @alisaroman9748 Před 5 lety +3

      Why apply to go there if They are that racist?There are other good colleges as well

    • @hasafienda
      @hasafienda Před 5 lety +5

      @@lStranger which is why the interview process is awful. I've seen too many people with a personality fail too much to give it any consideration. It's a poor indicator of anything.

    • @lStranger
      @lStranger Před 5 lety +9

      Nathan Nguyen
      Life is pretty unfair overall, it's important to find your own way of succeeding instead of just trying to do everything the right way.

  • @Primiterismm
    @Primiterismm Před 5 lety +9366

    The hosts look like they haven't slept in months.

    • @Primiterismm
      @Primiterismm Před 5 lety +570

      Theyre very professional and it's a really good video.

    • @sergiotheg13
      @sergiotheg13 Před 5 lety +90

      Dab pens are strong asf now a days bro

    • @LordVelari
      @LordVelari Před 5 lety +254

      Didn't sleep for months reviewing the documents

    • @kushagra0209
      @kushagra0209 Před 5 lety +234

      They were trying to get into Harvard.

    • @engchristianoakuku5741
      @engchristianoakuku5741 Před 5 lety +12

      I guess they should reveal secretive HOST selective process too

  • @jojotwice8918
    @jojotwice8918 Před 5 lety +621

    It's hard to imagine Harvard using these personality tests, considering how some famous alumnis like Zuckerberg are essentially humanized Androids

    • @noaheverett9647
      @noaheverett9647 Před 3 lety +6

      nah he probably just paid his way in

    • @hwt281
      @hwt281 Před 3 lety +27

      @@noaheverett9647 He shapeshifted his way in he's reptillian

    • @claireindigo1200
      @claireindigo1200 Před 3 lety +1

      😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @wheeliewheelie1
      @wheeliewheelie1 Před 3 lety +10

      Zuck didn't graduate. Neither did Bill Gates. Both were life of the Harvard parties. Not.

    • @pradipchaterjee9576
      @pradipchaterjee9576 Před 2 lety

      He's a drop-out LoL

  • @daviddechamplain5718
    @daviddechamplain5718 Před 5 lety +266

    When an institution views "quiet and hardworking" as a negative trait, maybe it's time to reassess the prestige attached to that institution.

    • @brittanybitch4908
      @brittanybitch4908 Před rokem +3

      As an African American woman that is married to a Korean man, I approve this message!!!

    • @dragonflarefrog1424
      @dragonflarefrog1424 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Good luck with that. Hardworking is a good trait, but quiet isn’t. They won’t contribute to the conversation.

  • @barrondevere
    @barrondevere Před 5 lety +355

    Is it not wayyy more interesting that it says "indistuinguisable from other Asian-Americans?" This suggests that the Asian American person in question is being compared solely to other Asian Americans and not the entire applicant pool, suggesting that Asian Americans are being treated differently.

    • @arunsalwan8558
      @arunsalwan8558 Před 4 lety +2

      Evan Hunt what is asian american ..indians r also asians ..

    • @highsun76
      @highsun76 Před 3 lety +15

      From what I've heard, applicants are put in specific "buckets" and compared to one another.

    • @Samir-rd8xp
      @Samir-rd8xp Před 3 lety +1

      Arun Salwan asian Americans are people from Asia that live in america

    • @megrocks3026
      @megrocks3026 Před 3 lety +4

      I understand that it’s unfair but its not truly racist because they dont reject ALL asians. Its not that they dont want asians in their school, they just dont want too many. They want the campus to be diverse, otherwise ivy league schools will be known as asian schools. Before you attack me for stereotyping a whole race as “smart”, obviously there are many more smart asian students than all the other races for harvard to have put a quota/limit on how many asians they accept.

    • @putinsgaytwin4272
      @putinsgaytwin4272 Před 3 lety +11

      @@megrocks3026 that’s still discrimination. They’re not accepting Asians based on race, not merit. They’re doing it so they can favour other races in hopes of being more diverse which to some may be a good reason, but they’re still excluding Asians based on race.

  • @ReevansElectro
    @ReevansElectro Před 5 lety +2457

    Harvard seems to be admitting that they only comb through applicants to find those who have already succeeded rather than to bring out the characteristics for success in anybody. This admission of incompetence in educating people or understanding the fundamentals of education is abhorrent and needs to be changed.

    • @annaclares3318
      @annaclares3318 Před 5 lety +80

      *sigh*
      As a student applying to schools right now, I too find this element of college admissions quite frustrating...

    • @GG-yy4yx
      @GG-yy4yx Před 5 lety +115

      Robert Evans Harvard is just a brand. Their goal is to perpetuate the brand and the money.

    • @n0yn0y
      @n0yn0y Před 5 lety +80

      THANK YOU! Too many universities and entry-level jobs are at fault for this. They expect way too much of students and recent grads, so they brush aside all the great potential candidates just because they don't meet their incredibly strict criteria.
      When these employers/admissions officers finally find someone who fills all of these boxes, they act surprised when said candidate acts uptight and entitled when they are tasked to do above-par work for sub-par pay. WELL WHO WOULD'VE THOUGHT???

    • @jean-baptistesay6941
      @jean-baptistesay6941 Před 5 lety +19

      Robert Evans Your claim makes no sense. Every single applicant can be seen to have potential. So how else would they determine who gets in? Thats where the already-present success comes in.

    • @ReevansElectro
      @ReevansElectro Před 5 lety +23

      Max: One of us has been teaching electrical control systems at a well known Institute of Technology for 20 years and the other is you. Education is a process that brings out a person's capacity and capability. Filtering candidates on the basis of past performance does nothing to enhance their potential. Harvard could determine who gets into their programs based on student potential and determination.

  • @wheeliewheelie1
    @wheeliewheelie1 Před 3 lety +125

    So, takeaway is, Asians should start their own Ivy League colleges.

    • @justjared2009
      @justjared2009 Před 3 lety +4

      I mean we could. 🤔

    • @pradipchaterjee9576
      @pradipchaterjee9576 Před 2 lety +6

      They already have
      Tsinghua iit
      .

    • @hankhill7780
      @hankhill7780 Před 2 lety +15

      Rice University

    • @commonercoffeeaddict
      @commonercoffeeaddict Před 2 lety +2

      That's how many colleges in Europe were started in the middle ages

    • @StevenMcglinn
      @StevenMcglinn Před 4 dny

      In Australia, the Chinese make up under 10% of the Student population and over 50% of the intake in Engineering, Physical Sciences, Medicine etc. Entry criteria is by academic scores only. White students are heavily under represented in the STEM subjects but over represented in low status and easy degrees with low pay like the Arts Law etc. .

  • @ascra1693
    @ascra1693 Před 5 lety +1109

    Your judged on what language your neighbors speak... but you cant control who buys the house down the street from you.....

    • @benhook1013
      @benhook1013 Před 5 lety +111

      While you cant, your wealth does. A lot of the families of applicants will be living in expensive or even gated communities and that lends itself towards a much smaller (and whiter) group of americans.

    • @freddieunicorns5170
      @freddieunicorns5170 Před 5 lety +7

      you're*

    • @Louis-qo7tf
      @Louis-qo7tf Před 5 lety +2

      Just buy a house in a rich white neighborhood

    • @tybera1114
      @tybera1114 Před 3 lety +9

      Uhh, they don't rate that as a negative. If you live in a community with lots of various languages and you're making straight A's that's a positive. This video just says they take it into consideration, not HOW they take it in to consideration. I don't know what college would think being fluent and exposed to multiple languages is a bad thing.

    • @thomasluby1754
      @thomasluby1754 Před 2 lety

      @As Cra Have no clue what you are trying to say.

  • @TrapGod_JackofAllTrades
    @TrapGod_JackofAllTrades Před 5 lety +2845

    This isn't just Harvard. I got an alumni interview with an Yale student, and when I tried to explain to her the frustration an Asian feels when their hard work is dismissed just because they are Asian, she looked at me with disgust. As if I had the audacity to complain for being Asian. Beach, I don't get some secret stat boost like a video because I am Asian.

    • @TrapGod_JackofAllTrades
      @TrapGod_JackofAllTrades Před 5 lety +192

      second note:
      Cant imagine how second generation asians feel. Must be suffocating.

    • @leslieangela9114
      @leslieangela9114 Před 5 lety +156

      She was white and couldn't relate

    • @giannigiovful
      @giannigiovful Před 5 lety +136

      XxDemonicGamer
      I mean that’s probably one of the stupidest times to complain about that though. It’s like a job interview. Don’t be negative or frustrated or complain, it reflects badly. It’s common sense. I don’t like it either but I don’t know what you were expecting.

    • @Anne_one
      @Anne_one Před 5 lety +183

      Giannigiovful
      You misunderstood his comment. He was frustrated by the fact that people attach his success to his race. They ignore that the fact that he genuinely worked hard for his position. The women was perpetuating the racist stereotype that Asians are biologically smarter than others.

    • @MichaelStanwyck
      @MichaelStanwyck Před 5 lety +9

      XxDemonicGamer could it be that it’s not because someone is Asian? Could it be because Harvard is looking for a mix of important criteria and excellence in academics and testing is only one area? Is it possible that someone who is so driven to succeed might de-emphasize other qualities or characteristics in their development and that it actually costs them?

  • @NOLAMarathon2010
    @NOLAMarathon2010 Před 5 lety +823

    Harvard denied the allegations, and they denied the alligator!

    • @rickfucci4512
      @rickfucci4512 Před 5 lety +6

      They probably call good bad and light dark over there in the shadow of the ivory tower of babel.

    • @DoubleGoon
      @DoubleGoon Před 5 lety +2

      Trump also denied the allegations.

    • @user-di4rm8bj2o
      @user-di4rm8bj2o Před 5 lety +3

      Good they do not get them into Harvard. 😂 Had one of them as professor he is the worst ! they act like not human ! some type of 🐍.
      With all due hate ☺️🌹

    • @ruiqi22
      @ruiqi22 Před 5 lety +11

      wedge tail eagle how do they cheat the system to get good grades? do tell; im very interested in how I can get in on that system cheating and why non-asians can’t

    • @FleurChat7
      @FleurChat7 Před 5 lety +1

      ruiqi22 as an Asian I agree

  • @fdfischer
    @fdfischer Před 5 lety +2651

    So if I want to go to Harvard I need to get straight A' s, have a personality akin to Jesus (at least on paper), and not be reclusive or boring

    • @albertbrennaman5605
      @albertbrennaman5605 Před 5 lety +161

      Sounds fair, for it being one of the worlds most elite universities

    • @TCSyndicate
      @TCSyndicate Před 5 lety +69

      @Albert Brennaman no it's not fair, because reclusiveness is correlated with intelligence and academic success. Having parties and studying don't go hand and hand.
      Not to mention there's no evidence that extraversion or being "fun" is a useful trait from an academic standpoint. It's convenient that Harvard would suddenly adopt this new standard that happens to satisfy their diversity agenda.

    • @therealphee
      @therealphee Před 5 lety +48

      All that OR have rich parents.

    • @veryscaryguy
      @veryscaryguy Před 5 lety

      Fellipe Fischerlnn n m m , m mmbmb mb ,..
      B ln .

    • @pieluver1234
      @pieluver1234 Před 5 lety +24

      Also not be Asian

  • @clince-rx2be
    @clince-rx2be Před 5 lety +284

    give huge donation you will get admission

  • @baze0191
    @baze0191 Před 5 lety +5560

    Stereotyping asians as boring and uninteresting just because they worked hard to get to those grades and extracurricular activities is dangerous. Would you say the same thing about a non-asian person who worked hard and wants to become a doctor? It is almost if you are not asian it is "wow hardworking, dilligent, self-disciplined" and if you are asian it is "meh, hardworking, so what?"
    And hardworking=/= uncreative and boring. The problem is when you think of a person who is hardworking and asian, you automatically imagine a nerd who works hard just to please their parents, lacks social skills and is incapable of thinking outside the box. You can be hardworking AND an excellent scholar of the future. The admission officer needs to stop judging applicants by preconceived stereotypes .

    • @lunayen
      @lunayen Před 5 lety +107

      Why did you bring black people into your discussion? Leave black people out of your mouth and use a different race.

    • @baze0191
      @baze0191 Před 5 lety +184

      @@lunayen i apologize for being ignorant.I should've said people of other race. My point was about asians being discriminated against, not about blacks getting special treatment. It was a bad example. My mistake

    • @lewdaniels1128
      @lewdaniels1128 Před 5 lety +17

      Most Asians are way well off compared to other groups that’s why

    • @Timothee_Chalamet_CMBYN
      @Timothee_Chalamet_CMBYN Před 5 lety

      😫🙌🏻

    • @Timothee_Chalamet_CMBYN
      @Timothee_Chalamet_CMBYN Před 5 lety +15

      lunayen prob because blacks get preferencial treatment then Hispanics.

  • @hazyMAGPIE
    @hazyMAGPIE Před 5 lety +1044

    I don’t understand why US colleges want to know all this information... In Europe no one asks you about your religion or ethnicity, because it is irrelevant - in my opinion, accepting someone with worse academic achievements then other applicants just for the sake of diversity is just as bad as keeping someone out because they do not belong to specific race or religion...

    • @MrSuperX5
      @MrSuperX5 Před 5 lety +34

      It's for demographic purposes

    • @MilitanT07
      @MilitanT07 Před 5 lety +39

      Europe is much much MUCH more homogenous, so stfu!

    • @NgataNare
      @NgataNare Před 5 lety +77

      Yes I studied in Europe for grad school and all they ask for is, grades, were you in the top 1% of your previous class? And An undergrad research paper. The class still ended up having diversity.

    • @theidiotzonexo
      @theidiotzonexo Před 5 lety +4

      here in ireland you get an applicant number and apply to college courses by filling them in on a form and sending it to the central applications office
      they pick who gets a place from the highest point applicant in descending order, and the lowest points to get into that course are published as a guideline

    • @l.c.8475
      @l.c.8475 Před 5 lety +4

      @@MilitanT07 maybe, but that doesn't change the fact that we have diverse universities...

  • @sohamnaik8820
    @sohamnaik8820 Před 5 lety +532

    What about rich buying their way into Harvard?

    • @lucyanm6361
      @lucyanm6361 Před 5 lety +91

      Kushner wasn't even in the top 10th percentile of his class, but his father donated 1 million dollars and GUESS who was the only one in his class to get in??? Money is powerful

    • @xerolimitation3156
      @xerolimitation3156 Před 5 lety +40

      At this rate might Harvard might as well start selling degrees.

    • @KittredgeRitter
      @KittredgeRitter Před 5 lety +16

      That's a huge problem we have seen in the last 40 years. Charles Murray goes into it further. He said it used to be said that there were a lot of smart people and a few rich people there, only now it's switched. The wealthy pay private tutors for their kids to pass the SAT's. The thing is that was originally for low income high IQ people.

    • @asahel980
      @asahel980 Před 5 lety +6

      thats basically in everything, a reality that needed to be accepted. The Rich people todays are the Aristocrats of old days.

    • @KittredgeRitter
      @KittredgeRitter Před 5 lety +2

      @@asahel980 Eh not really. We've had low income people be helped by the system before people just gave up on the system. So don't give up! We don't need apathetic people in modern times. We need people who have vision and aptitude to get things done.

  • @heesingsia4634
    @heesingsia4634 Před 5 lety +618

    Does it mean then, that Asian Americans who graduated from Harvard will be first in line to land a job ? Since they're supposed to be so good that even Harvard can't find any faults with them?

    • @lunayen
      @lunayen Před 5 lety +47

      They are always the first in line to get a job.

    • @brownieboiii
      @brownieboiii Před 5 lety +25

      Companies privy to this policy will be wise to hire Asians who still were accepted despite this bias over people accepted due only to their skin color

    • @icytea5
      @icytea5 Před 5 lety +22

      In your dreams maybe. Employers treat Asians the same way Harvard does.

    • @stelacoleslaw
      @stelacoleslaw Před 5 lety +5

      Lesbian Amazon Sister Asians making more than their white peers is a myth. Asians tend to have more people in their households than whites, so it seems like they make more.

    • @Murmurrr
      @Murmurrr Před 5 lety +3

      lunayen you clearly have a bias against Asians. Your comments are everywhere

  • @chile8161
    @chile8161 Před 5 lety +333

    Why is race in the picture of college admission? Shouldn’t the process be based on everything else besides race?

    • @JohnSmith-yv9tq
      @JohnSmith-yv9tq Před 5 lety +60

      Meric Ekinci These kids are Asian American. “American”

    • @benjaminlee1972
      @benjaminlee1972 Před 5 lety +38

      @@greenlight2323 isnt your name turkish? That's like saying we shouldn't allow turks to study abroad and "steal" resources from other western unis to take back to a country with a pro-islam government that doesnt uphold western values. Turkey doesnt exactly have 'freedom' either. Stop pretending you're white you have some insecurity issues.

    • @greenlight2323
      @greenlight2323 Před 5 lety +2

      @@benjaminlee1972 I am a kurd. The Name i have is by force. You shouldnt sacrafice the US only because 500 Chinese students will get Hurt by their Feelings. You dont have any clue how bad this is. Go and watch some documentations about China and their Student Programms in Europe. They are destroying the West and you are talking about thousand peoples Feelings.

    • @itsevelyn1139
      @itsevelyn1139 Před 5 lety +8

      It’s funny because the reason why they do that is because of race lol. colleges prefer to allow African Americans and Hispanics into colleges because of the low count. They say that they want more diversity other than just whites and asians. Most conservatives favor that colleges shouldn’t do that because it’s bias and unfair but a lot of liberals are for affirmative action because it makes college more accessible.

    • @tehsin13
      @tehsin13 Před 5 lety +1

      Then every college will be full of Asians and whites

  • @pam0626
    @pam0626 Před 4 lety +61

    A boring or indistinguishable personality should not be a factor. Most 18-year olds have no idea who they are. Their personalities aren’t fully formed; they haven’t yet found their voice or calling in life. A good college experience helps them to blossom.

    • @abdallababikir9154
      @abdallababikir9154 Před 2 lety +5

      yeah but they're looking for the few who have matured at age 18.

    • @KitsGravity
      @KitsGravity Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@abdallababikir9154they be looking for already successful kids with rich parents

  • @cozettesk
    @cozettesk Před 3 lety +130

    the doctor one really bothered me because I don't need a doctor with a great personality, I just need a doctor smart enough to save my life and others who are in need

    • @andreasschmidt7215
      @andreasschmidt7215 Před 3 lety +11

      Well yes, but no... Doctors and nurses or any medical employee should have a fitting personality when in contact with patients. The psychological part of medicine shouldnt be underestimated.
      So I understand that personality is an important factor for the admissions.
      But I do not wanna defend what Harvard is doing here! Being Asian should not change the expected personality and those comments are clearly not OK.

    • @joeshp3642
      @joeshp3642 Před 3 lety +2

      Well not exactly, the reason I trusted my surgeon sm with my life was bc of his charm and personality without that I wouldn't have been able to move forward with the procedure. There are many capable nurses and doctors but the ones that stand out to me the most are the ones who were rlly good at their job while having personality! I have also replaced boring doctors, u must have charisma in that field if u want to gain trust from ur patients.

    • @cozettesk
      @cozettesk Před 3 lety +7

      @@joeshp3642 well there is shortage of doctors and it's kind of unfair that the admission process tends to automatically label asian people based on stereotypes. In a life threatening situation where a doctor is needed right away, I wouldn't have time to consult with the doctor.

    • @joeshp3642
      @joeshp3642 Před 3 lety

      @@cozettesk yeah I agree about the stereotypes being unfair but if you don't stick out to an admissions officer because there was lack of personality in their opinion, that doesn't mean you will never make it as a doctor. That just means you weren't what that school was looking for.

    • @cozettesk
      @cozettesk Před 3 lety +5

      @@joeshp3642 The admissions officers are using stereotypes to judge an applicant. They're labeling certain kids as "quiet" just cause there Asian, not because its their personality.

  • @ericswenson5424
    @ericswenson5424 Před 5 lety +54

    Dougherty and Stuyvesant are the best schools in SF and NYC and have fully merit based acceptance and are 75% asian and 20% white. If Harvard was similarly merit based it would have similar demographics.

    • @jean-baptistesay6941
      @jean-baptistesay6941 Před 5 lety +17

      Eric Swenson thats a terrible comparison-those schools’ acceptances are purely based on numerics. They dont take into account the most important factors of Harvard’s admission, which are extracurriculars and essays. I know this because I go to TJHSST, a school that outranks both of the ones you mention.

    • @Bruh-lm4zr
      @Bruh-lm4zr Před 5 lety +1

      Big Schlong Max oh yea yea

    • @natecept9428
      @natecept9428 Před 5 lety +9

      @@jean-baptistesay6941 Actually, it is not, since the prevailing argument against AA is typically that black/latino kids with lower academic/merit scores are taking slots away from asian/white kids with higher test scores. I have never heard someone who was opposed to AA ever mention the extracurricular activities or essays of the black/latino kid. Race is the first thing that is brought up in these arguments.

    • @chunhaylee
      @chunhaylee Před 5 lety +6

      That's what they are afraid of. They pretend to care about black and brown people, but affirmative action is really about protecting white people from competition.

    • @ericswenson5424
      @ericswenson5424 Před 5 lety +8

      @@jean-baptistesay6941 hey dumbass your school is 66% asian and 25% white and shifting towards a higher percent of asians at a rate of 12% more asians per year: www.washingtonpost.com/local/education/student-population-at-thomas-jefferson-shifts-significantly/2013/04/21/f04446b6-a6d9-11e2-b029-8fb7e977ef71_story.html?.67906262312e

  • @ropro9817
    @ropro9817 Před 5 lety +642

    I knew it... Where do I sign up for the class action lawsuit?

    • @DSQueenie
      @DSQueenie Před 5 lety +3

      ro pro the trial’s not over yet. If there is a class action suit it’ll be after this trial.

    • @DoubleGoon
      @DoubleGoon Před 5 lety +54

      We are sorry to inform you that you are too bland to be apart of this class action lawsuit.
      We recommend you fix this deficiency before re-applying.
      (Note: There will be $75.00 non-refundable application process fee. If you cannot afford this fee then contact our financial assistance office where we can assist you in finding a loan that will haunt you for the rest of your life.)

    • @greenlight2323
      @greenlight2323 Před 5 lety +4

      I am Sure the communist Party will pay your lawsuit.

    • @DSQueenie
      @DSQueenie Před 5 lety +2

      Meric Ekinci ???

    • @giannigiovful
      @giannigiovful Před 5 lety

      ro pro I wouldn’t sign up for it, kind of a waste to try and go against Harvard imo. But take a try at it if you really want, I just wouldn’t bet on it at all.

  • @d2touge
    @d2touge Před 5 lety +749

    3:33 "smart and hardworking yet uninteresting and indistinguishable FROM OTHER ASIAN-AMERICAN APPLICANTS"
    "from other asian-americas applications" is not highlighted...

    • @fajarsetiawan8665
      @fajarsetiawan8665 Před 5 lety +115

      Which means it is a generalized stereotype

    • @tristanneal9552
      @tristanneal9552 Před 5 lety +94

      Seriously, can't believe they missed that. Kind of a big omission.

    • @mathieumaticien
      @mathieumaticien Před 5 lety +14

      Bc you know what they say.... "All asians look.......... Like people from all different races." Highlighting it would have completed the stereotype, einstein

    • @tehguitarque
      @tehguitarque Před 5 lety +14

      Realize that is NOT a direct quote from the rules or the process. It is a conclusion based on the other quotes surrounding that sentence (looks like a valid one). Will be nice to see more guts of their admissions out.

    • @meganbailey4188
      @meganbailey4188 Před 5 lety +10

      propaganda, thats how it works

  • @theniii
    @theniii Před 5 lety +198

    The two reporters appear to be smart and hardworking yet uninteresting and indistinguishable from other reporters. sorry i had to.

    • @bonitabanana9342
      @bonitabanana9342 Před 3 lety +4

      I quite agree. I'm asian btw, and somehow I still get where the comment came from. It must be the general culture (not everyone but most asians have commonalities). Having fun such as going to parties, night outs are usually seen as something "bad" while staying at home and studying is enforced as "good traits". This is why some asians are socially awkward but have good academic standing because
      studying is what we are forced to do most of the time. Emotional and social intelligence are not equally prioritized as the conventional academic intelligence. Say you are very book smart but does not have the social chops to be in the elite circle, how successful can you be then than those who have both? I think Harvard looks for a well rounded individual (Academic, Social and Emotional) rather than the one dimensional book smart people.

  • @kolbypham7318
    @kolbypham7318 Před 5 lety +1547

    You'll never know how I got these likes.

    • @ruiqi22
      @ruiqi22 Před 5 lety +32

      But why not interesting or distinct as a human instead of interesting compared to Asian peers?

    • @PeterWW420
      @PeterWW420 Před 5 lety +35

      The have quotas of each race.

    • @ruiqi22
      @ruiqi22 Před 5 lety +46

      *illegal intensifies*

    • @kolbypham7318
      @kolbypham7318 Před 5 lety +15

      @@PeterWW420 quotas are illegal

    • @casioamplifier
      @casioamplifier Před 5 lety +14

      I agree with your statement. It’s even more shocking when you realize that Asian Americans comprise only about approximately 1% of the total population of America. Yet, they would rather a Vietnamese American compete with a Chinese American or Indian American to get that one coveted spot at Harvard.

  • @alvindurochermtl
    @alvindurochermtl Před 3 lety +12

    I chose a Canadian university, and most Canadian universities are public and they largely look at your grades only.
    Now some have criticized the Canadian admission process for being too simplistic.
    Those who've said this are either Ivy League alumni who sit on their school's interview boards, on a power trip or have questionable benefits to reap from applicants, or education consultants who make money out of helping parents to navigate through US schools' subjective and convoluted admission process. Needless to say, these consultants have little money to make from Canadian schools which don't have such processes.
    Let's be honest, like SAT and university rankings, the US school admission system is a money game set up to satisfy a conglomerate of people's specific interests.

  • @brainxtc2171
    @brainxtc2171 Před 5 lety +92

    Not much of a revelation.

    • @edwink1467
      @edwink1467 Před 5 lety

      BrainXTC Yep. Nothing I didn’t know before. C’mon spill some tea lol

    • @Xrelent
      @Xrelent Před 5 lety

      It is confirmed now, though.

  • @mein214
    @mein214 Před 5 lety +237

    Harvard university is only one of the best because people make it the best. If people I'll stop applying or going to that university it will not be the best. Is like the brand apple just overrated.

    • @giannigiovful
      @giannigiovful Před 5 lety +11

      mco Good luck making that happen, people are always going to want to go to Harvard, not that I’d recommend it lol

    • @stevenkhosh4301
      @stevenkhosh4301 Před 5 lety +6

      Harvard ranks no1 in business and many other majors. the students never chose the best courses.

    • @emmarellda181
      @emmarellda181 Před 4 lety +5

      thats why the UC schools are ranking higher and higher each year with zero discrimination or consideration against asians.

    • @jeromemushi2442
      @jeromemushi2442 Před 4 lety

      Your absolutely blowed.🤣 you said Harvard is overrated. The person that programmed your keyboard on your computer probably went to an Ivey league school.

    • @jacobr5627
      @jacobr5627 Před 4 lety +8

      @@jeromemushi2442 You didn't even spell ivy right and you're calling someone else stupid for pointing out that Harvard succeeds primarily on reputation.

  • @johnschlachtenhaufen3149
    @johnschlachtenhaufen3149 Před 5 lety +108

    I was surprised when I heard that this lawsuit was contentious because I've always thought it was just common knowledge that Asian Americans are discriminated against in the college admissions process. Please correct me if I'm wrong, but I've always thought of it like this:
    When colleges implemented affirmative action policies in their admissions processes, the size of the pool of admitted students didn't significantly change. Thus, it is fair to continue to view the admission process as a zero-sum game. For example, considering all else equal, the acceptance of one student due to excellent grades necessarily implies the rejection of another due to inferior grades. If we apply this to race, then obviously some group of students will be discriminated against as a direct result of affirmative action. If one student's application value is increased because he/she belongs to a certain race, then another student's application value is necessarily decreased because he/she does not belong to that race, since they both can't get in in every scenario where all other application components are equal. From my observations and research, this group is Asian Americans.
    With that said, I do believe there is tremendous value in the diversity offered from affirmative action policies. I think effectively balancing that value with its inadvertent negative consequences is a tricky problem that is far from a clear solution.

    • @sunnyb6484
      @sunnyb6484 Před 5 lety +4

      I also thought it was common knowledge. I mean my parents always tell me to be as outgoing in extracurricular activities as possible because Asians are more likely to be rejected.

    • @YYStephanieYY
      @YYStephanieYY Před 5 lety

      Wow the mention of a zero-sum game, nicely said and very true :)

    • @amandahalee
      @amandahalee Před 3 lety +2

      The problem is whites and asians are not equally 'down-graded'. They helped the blacks but are now kicking out specifically the asians instead of all the other races. It is white supremacy plain and simple. You know what, its great because we get to keep the best talents in Asia instead of having them all going to America.

    • @manag3r198
      @manag3r198 Před 3 lety +7

      If there really was diversity, Harvard should have a higher percentage of Black and Latino people but they still are the minority on campus. It does not accomplish what it is supposed to do, it only bars Asians from getting in.

  • @Vmonster
    @Vmonster Před 5 lety +130

    it'll be interesting if all asian americans boycotts harvard and no one apply there in future

    • @fullbarneystinsoness
      @fullbarneystinsoness Před 5 lety +30

      Vmonster in a perfect world

    • @importantguycommenting8156
      @importantguycommenting8156 Před 5 lety +44

      The Liberals are saying Asian students are over represented and should only make up 5% so it's equal to their % population in the US. SO WHY is the NBA 95% black, black people are way over represented in the league. Therefore we need affirmative action to reduce black players to 13% of the NBA in order to represent the demographics of the US and increase diversity. They don't have an answer to this response, they're okay with racism as long as it benefits them.

    • @ruiqi22
      @ruiqi22 Před 5 lety +27

      Kostas Antes but did they produce the billionaires or did the most children of rich parents apply for the brand and get admitted there...?

    • @zhengjason2345
      @zhengjason2345 Před 5 lety +5

      ruiqi22 oooooo thats a fair point

    • @amsd1231
      @amsd1231 Před 5 lety +4

      Frank Wercinski Exactly. You go to Ivy league schools to get your foot into one of these exclusive clubs. Honestly you can teach yourself everything that they teach you in universities for FREE. What do go there for is the brand and the networks.

  • @__8023
    @__8023 Před 5 lety +243

    Where can I find the documents

    • @RobinsM
      @RobinsM Před 5 lety +29

      Find what court they were filed in and then the official government court website would have them since they are public record. Honestly just google around you will run across them in a few minutes.

    • @devdesai3210
      @devdesai3210 Před 5 lety +1

      If you could please send a link... Its not coming up

    • @user-ik2by4ml8d
      @user-ik2by4ml8d Před 5 lety +13

      I FOUND IT apps.washingtonpost(dot)com/g/documents/local/evidence-in-harvard-admissions-trial/3248/

    • @rithvikgujjula1400
      @rithvikgujjula1400 Před 4 lety

      @@user-ik2by4ml8d I cant find it

  • @tristanneal9552
    @tristanneal9552 Před 5 lety +107

    Affirmative action at work, amiright?
    And no, this isn't just an objective truth about Asians. Just because you've met some bland Asian students in your time doesn't make the stereotype true. Passion, hard work, and quietness are not mutually exclusive. And we have an outright admission of Asian students being held to a different personality standard than other students, so this is a fault of Harvard admissions rather than of the Asian applicants.

    • @___Truth___
      @___Truth___ Před 5 lety +5

      Asians are cool af here in San Diego, the lit parties kickbacks and functions they have going in SDSU and UCSD is well known, it really didn't make sense to me why "boring" is a stereotype, idk, some people are just shut ins and haven't had real life experiences with people I guess.

    • @SmileBaby143
      @SmileBaby143 Před 5 lety

      santa in the house I looked up the demographics and to be honest in terms of race demographics, the only people affected are white students and black students, as the Latino student population usually stays around the same when compared to universities to where there is affirmative action. The Asian population more than doubled, but like you said, that might be because a lot non-Asian Americans come to these universities as well, so a lot of these demographics probably include Asians that are on student visa.

    • @tristanneal9552
      @tristanneal9552 Před 5 lety

      @Luke Drinking from Alien Titty
      Many people think that affirmative action is racism. Asians are not a minority in academics, they're really not different from the white population. If you consider it racism to consider racial quotas and deferentially accept certain races over Asians, then you think affirmative action is racism.

  • @dvikauglaumishrauca
    @dvikauglaumishrauca Před 5 lety +5

    Journalism requires going through dossier of paper to find out minute details that people with power use to do their dirty laundry. It requires a lot of reading and spending at homes or offices. Right now when a chunk of population detests journalists and journalism in general, I feel they deserve respect and appreciation.

  • @hyundkim199
    @hyundkim199 Před 5 lety +189

    This is important because all other colleges model after Harvard. If they're racist, all other colleges will choose to be racist.

    • @mtb416
      @mtb416 Před 5 lety

      This trend was truly pioneered by Californian state schools.

    • @YuknoomCheen_III
      @YuknoomCheen_III Před 5 lety +2

      Slippery slope fallacy.

    • @renrosemary9882
      @renrosemary9882 Před 5 lety

      @Joel Schembri it is true not all universities model themselves after Harvard. However the point that many universities do model themselves after Harvard still stands. The meaning conveyed remains generally the same.

    • @renrosemary9882
      @renrosemary9882 Před 5 lety

      Thanks for the correction. Looking back upon my message I can understand why some people may have had trouble understanding it xD

  • @BlackSwan-sq2iw
    @BlackSwan-sq2iw Před 5 lety +7

    The way I interpret it ... “personal rating” is just the fudge factor to help achieve what they already decided is the desired mix of students they want.

    • @jayrollo1352
      @jayrollo1352 Před 3 lety +1

      Yup it's just a cover for them to discriminate lawfully.

  • @eweksi
    @eweksi Před 5 lety +4

    Sick. Anyone with an ounce of self-respect should stay away from such admission processes.

  • @lenard3935
    @lenard3935 Před 3 lety +8

    Easy, just ask your rich dad to speed up the admission process

  • @harrycooper9511
    @harrycooper9511 Před 5 lety +112

    Utterly entertaining.

  • @pantsuck11
    @pantsuck11 Před 5 lety +9

    I always knew zip code and percentage of english speaking students went into it. I remember visiting Havard one day and asking a very wealthy parent how their children got in, without going too much into detail they explained they had access to a rubric.

  • @halfbakedicecream
    @halfbakedicecream Před 5 lety +7

    I‘m so lucky all I needed to make it into law school is a copy of the results of my A-Level exams.

    • @chenath9582
      @chenath9582 Před 3 lety

      elaborate?

    • @prachisharma8237
      @prachisharma8237 Před 2 lety

      @@chenath9582 he means to say he’s British and doesn’t have to deal with this cluster fuckery of a system

  • @justinnanu4338
    @justinnanu4338 Před 5 lety +5

    Universities should not be stereotyping applicants, but I do agree that there is more to an applicant than their marks. The 21st century workplace is looking for qualities like collaboration, an accurate assessment of one's own strengths, creative problem-solving, interest in learning new things, and innovation. A well-rounded university applicant should not only be academically capable but should also demonstrate some of these competencies as well. Students that put marks above all else and sacrifice opportunities in the pursuit of a perfect grade are missing out on way too many opportunities to develop socially, emotionally, and cognitively. Of course, none of this is unique to any one culture, and it's disappointing to see some of these anecdotes from the admissions department of a very prestigious institution.

  • @jorgejavierlaborde6623
    @jorgejavierlaborde6623 Před 5 lety +7

    where can i obtain those documents?

  • @amasco_
    @amasco_ Před 5 lety +6

    I want to be very clear on this because I believe that Harvard and other Universities use this method to get a diverse class not only in terms of race, but also passion and drive. What people really should be investing their time on is the unfairness that circulates around legacy children or students whose parents “donate” to have their children get into a prestigious school like Harvard, because to be quite honest most of those kids aren’t qualified they’re just rich.

  • @WildDisease72
    @WildDisease72 Před 5 lety +6

    Seems very thorough.. they are doing due diligence

  • @jessebradley3433
    @jessebradley3433 Před 3 lety +22

    Why would it matter if my parents went to an Ivy League

  • @ginniem9779
    @ginniem9779 Před 5 lety +14

    How can you evaluate personal traits like maturity, kindness, open-mindedness, and likability of someone based on a few-minute long interview? Those are traits hard to evaluate even after knowing someone for months. I think it is absurd to have those as college admission criteria in the first place. The professional traits are easier to assess in a few minutes, such as academic scores, extracurricular activities, and interview questions. But personal traits?? How is that a criteria in the first place?

  • @tongkatali7643
    @tongkatali7643 Před 5 lety +292

    Trade war becomes Education war ?

    • @MrDannyArcher
      @MrDannyArcher Před 5 lety

      Kopi tongkat ali satu!

    • @davidyang6074
      @davidyang6074 Před 5 lety +6

      No, Chinese Americans are not Chinese. It wouldn't happen. Even though Chinese applicants get discriminated even more than Chinese Americans.

    • @jubilent07
      @jubilent07 Před 5 lety

      interesting comment

    • @zaidtaha9777
      @zaidtaha9777 Před 5 lety

      Stupid comment

    • @KittredgeRitter
      @KittredgeRitter Před 5 lety

      What do you mean?

  • @OrganicDolphin
    @OrganicDolphin Před 2 lety +2

    This is what happens across the board for medical school admissions in this country. They even have terms like ORM and URM to see which minority fits the bill.

  • @eternalindian6714
    @eternalindian6714 Před 5 lety +4

    I have had no idea about secrecy in admission process of Harvard. In India,the secrecy is maintained regarding conducting entrance exams, setting up and moderating questions (so that no leak happens), interviews (as there is no system to verify interview performance objectively) and of course checking of entrance exam papers.But now a days most of the exam boards publish model answers and through Right to information act someone can ask for his or her answer scripts to be shown. In some privately run institutions, suspicious admission process did occur in professional courses,but today our govt and court have been able to block the loophole in many respect.
    But at the same time our constitutionally mandated affirmative actions admit dumb students excluding the goods in the name of promoting social justice.This is a real problem as you will find so many low quality students in our leading institutions.Discriminating goods, admitting bads to promote diversity are unjustified as it promotes another kind of social injustice.
    Even though,the argument of Harvard university is to some extent correct,as Asian students are mostly marks scoring machine but that doesn't mean they are unsocial. Asia itself is very much colorful and diverse in terms of socioreliguous occasions.The background behind rushing towards high grades is ingrained in Asian minds as in most Asian countries good higher educational institutions and jobs are too competitive as the selection rate hardly goes beyond 1 or 2%(in rare cases it may go up to 5%) due to over population and limited resources.

  • @dinogaming4419
    @dinogaming4419 Před 5 lety +8

    Why is there even race involved in applications?

    • @thenosey
      @thenosey Před 3 lety

      Because minorities wouldn't get in and everyone would be outraged

    • @woahkemosabe7755
      @woahkemosabe7755 Před 3 lety

      @@thenosey They literally would, as they have done way before ''race'' was considered you moron

  • @KO-fh4vn
    @KO-fh4vn Před 5 lety +3

    My uncharitable and unhindered biases regarding this is that Harvard has found an alternate route to allow for a certain type of discrimination that one might say was unfounded, but restraining that suspicion with open-mindedness, I can imagine their admissions office shares a vision of a quintessentially "well-rounded student", with a significant tool kit of intangible qualifiers. I won't say which one I'm leaning towards, but I will say I tend to have a misanthropic outlook and I wouldn't be surprised if it were the former.

  • @jcheri
    @jcheri Před 5 lety +1

    Literally every University does this...

    • @importantguycommenting8156
      @importantguycommenting8156 Před 5 lety +1

      @@autumnskies567 You Again.... Just explain to me why there should be Affirmative Action? Why do you want to keep it? You're bashing Asians in every comment and I want to know why.

  • @stepheninczech
    @stepheninczech Před 5 lety +1

    Here's a question. After all the reviews of applicants are done, who makes the final call on who gets in? Is it just taking the top 2000 or so applicants based on a single total rating or is there someone or some committee that can shift the numbers around at the end?

  • @nick2509
    @nick2509 Před 5 lety +3

    It's literally Harvard Law, of course they evaluate an individual's character and personality in addition to their academic and professional achievements. There are plenty of qualified people on paper, but a person really has to be the full package if they're to be admitted to a top tier law school. I truly hope Harvard isn't bias in their selection of candidates, that would be a really unforgivable thing to do for an institution devoted to justice and law.

  • @rockymaffitt3345
    @rockymaffitt3345 Před 3 lety +4

    Its so interesting that as a black applicant, I was told that its all about your personality in college interview.

    • @jayrollo1352
      @jayrollo1352 Před 3 lety +2

      It's because the bar is set a bit lower for black applicants. Usually if you an average performer, you can still beat out other applicants so long as you seems like a good person. Not gona say if that's an ethical thing, I'm just holding up the mirror here.

  • @RamkrishanYT
    @RamkrishanYT Před 5 lety +1

    First time I'm watching a WSJ. Good work on covering up these topics in a rational manner.

  • @christinescratchy9801
    @christinescratchy9801 Před 5 lety

    Thanks for shedding light on this topic! I enjoyed watching this.

  • @gangatalishis
    @gangatalishis Před 5 lety +47

    MIT does the same thing.

    • @lordindranilghosh
      @lordindranilghosh Před 5 lety +10

      MIT is mostly hardworking intelligent introverted unappealing people.. that's why they are the best.. it's skills and intelligence that gets u accepted not personal traits.

    • @aerohk
      @aerohk Před 5 lety +12

      MIT is full of Asian though

    • @diegoleaver1235
      @diegoleaver1235 Před 5 lety +3

      Have you been to MIT?

    • @gangatalishis
      @gangatalishis Před 5 lety +2

      @@diegoleaver1235 yes Asian dominated, hence why Asians have a lesser chance of getting in now.

    • @rimun5235
      @rimun5235 Před 5 lety

      @@aerohk I notice the student body is still 10% black. I am very curious what removing affirmative action would make the student body look like. I have a feeling, you aren't going to see any change as colleges will still factor in other things. Also, many colleges approach student athletes. If a college even remotely has a good athletics team, they definitely will favor student athletes. Can't blame them though because these kids earn money for the school. On that note, in the real world sadly, merit may get your foot in the door, but it's rare that it will get you anywhere. You need to network, interview well and to some extent be easy on the eyes. When I look at our managing directors, etc. They lean entirely white. As a Kenyan immigrant here in the States. My family emphasized academics far too much and my only saving grace is I do not have the personality of a door knob. I find immigrants are prone to working hard but not necessarily smart and my Asian friends and I joke about this.

  • @derek7762
    @derek7762 Před 5 lety +3

    This is why you have to apply to the UC’s. Racial quotas, etc. are banned in California (as well as in 7 other states), plus as a public institution everything is transparent. Also, if you’re a resident it’s much cheaper

  • @Dimasstywan
    @Dimasstywan Před 5 lety +2

    I’m an asian student studying in one of the top university in The Netherlands sometimes there’s a discrimination towards grading in the group projects against asian and yeah this is the world that we living in, it never goes away

  • @quahntasy
    @quahntasy Před 5 lety +2

    The Asian journalist looks so happy lol.

  • @NT1WT
    @NT1WT Před 5 lety +44

    so we should ditch real world competency for pc? it’s sad that harvard’s standards might perpetuate the higher society circle, but I would take a meritocracy over a giant kindergarten

    • @lunayen
      @lunayen Před 5 lety +8

      America was never a meritocratic nation.

  • @revolutionalist
    @revolutionalist Před 5 lety +12

    They need to be an East Asian movement then, if you don’t shout, nobody listens. This is unfair but from observation it’s very true

    • @eagann92
      @eagann92 Před 5 lety +2

      Unfortunately Asians are too quiet... they don’t whine enough for others to really care about them.

    • @rimun5235
      @rimun5235 Před 5 lety +2

      Asians are least likely to participate in politics sadly. That means, Asian problems go ignored! Even if they whine, they do not constitute a significant amount of the population for people to care. Think about it. Politicians pander to Hispanics and blacks, never to Asians.

  • @twist777hz
    @twist777hz Před 5 lety +2

    I'm baffled Harvard hasn't argued that, as a tertiary institution in the United States, their admissions criteria are based not only on the individual suitability and capability of candidates but also on the net amount of positive externalities accruing to American society as a whole. It’s clear there are significant net benefits accruing to American society by admitting an African American or Hispanic American at the expense of an Asian American in terms of, for instance, reduction in poverty, drug use and violent crimes.

  • @darc1290
    @darc1290 Před 5 lety +1

    Wow I can’t imagine myself ever getting into a school like that haha

  • @nathancraig4710
    @nathancraig4710 Před 5 lety +26

    It’s horrible that Harvard is doing this but I think the really sad thing is how many Asian-American parents stifle their children’s dreams and project their wishes onto the kid, rather than letting them find out what they want in life

  • @Lea-rx6he
    @Lea-rx6he Před 5 lety +4

    The funny thing to think about is that the world’s population is made of more than 60% of Asians. And we have to be put into one category that is sometimes an expectation. All of this stuff is overwhelming. I understand that they are doing this for diversity on their campus but 60% of us. I mean from what I think is correct there are still quite a lot of Harvard that are Asians. So I understand both sides and have been reading these comments but can’t decide to hate Harvard or support them but who cares I’m just one person right. I want equality but how can we truly measure it if we all think differently.

    • @sonicx7410
      @sonicx7410 Před 5 lety

      Comprise, but in today's PC culture that's harder to come by.

  • @SuperSportRob95
    @SuperSportRob95 Před 5 lety

    That woman on the right looks like she spent 3 all nighters reading every page in that box

  • @hankjones4847
    @hankjones4847 Před 5 lety

    Where can I find that chart that was briefly shown?

  • @michaelsaenz380
    @michaelsaenz380 Před 5 lety +8

    My crush from middle school got accepted to Harvard. She's Chinese too. She's extra special!!

    • @michaelsaenz380
      @michaelsaenz380 Před 5 lety

      @Critical Black Race Hippo I think she had a near perfect SAT score. She was in band, which is how I met her, and seemed like a well rounded student in general which is what Harvard is looking for I'm assuming.

    • @2FadeMusic
      @2FadeMusic Před 5 lety

      @@michaelsaenz380 I crushed on a chinese girl in middle school too, but she was an idiot

    • @Prosper_Dean
      @Prosper_Dean Před 5 lety

      @@2FadeMusic are you sure

    • @otk88403
      @otk88403 Před 5 lety

      Of course the admissions committee full of white men prefers Asian women over Asian guys.

  • @Mirsab
    @Mirsab Před 5 lety +3

    0:25 wait, KORN is an actual name and not just an edgy name that suits a metal band??? Woaaoohhh

  • @gabriellebertrand3054
    @gabriellebertrand3054 Před 5 lety +1

    I'm am not surprised at all. A classmate of mine was a National Spelling Bee champion, Valedictorian, as well as captain of various school clubs (Debate Club, Science Olympiad, etc.) and HE was deferred from Harvard.

  • @andreanicolaleksic5513

    Does anybody know where can I find this guide for admissions officers?

  • @MinttMeringue
    @MinttMeringue Před 5 lety +3

    I mean, I kind of get where Harvard is coming from. I don't think it's right, and it should change, but I get what they're trying to do. They don't just want kids whose parents forced them through life, and they want kids who think out-of-the-box, and the kids who only did honors and AP classes thoughtout school might not have that. But still, it should change

  • @pimeto
    @pimeto Před 5 lety +3

    Looks like a lot of BS about these argumnts. Expecting to see similiar video for every group of people in the US.

  • @KamanBagati
    @KamanBagati Před 5 lety

    Aw I loved that little blooper!

  • @devdesai3210
    @devdesai3210 Před 5 lety +1

    Hey guys... could one get a pdf of these files?

  • @unaninanine3743
    @unaninanine3743 Před 5 lety +9

    Both journalists remind me of vampires, before and after.
    Both ways.

  • @girlmeetstech9946
    @girlmeetstech9946 Před 5 lety +4

    Dammit, I'll stop working so hard, so I can be more interesting.

  • @pizzaboynizza1
    @pizzaboynizza1 Před 5 lety +2

    Interesting...you’d intuitively expect a school to prefer those who more most likely to excel academically...if nothing more than a business standpoint.

  • @anima132000
    @anima132000 Před 5 lety +1

    Okay so how is being a hard worker contradictory to being an outstanding scholar? Hard work and the patience for it is a quality of an outstanding scholar.

  • @Rakhilya
    @Rakhilya Před 5 lety +4

    Great piece! Thank you for bringing this up. I realize that Harvard wants the best, but really? You are going to discriminate "untalanted" because they are weren't lucky enough to grow up in a society that values talent rather than the ability to work hard? At the end of the day, no one person is talentless.
    And thank you for looking real (read as look like me) ladies. At least somebody on youtube does.

  • @xDfairytailfangirl
    @xDfairytailfangirl Před 5 lety +3

    Definitely ALL Asians don't fit that stereotype, but how about the population of Asians that applied to Harvard? Do they? No one here has the facts on that population except Harvard. Anyone can work hard and get a 4.0, especially if you're in the middle or upper class and can get a private tutor and payed help. Also, they look for people who can contribute to the atmosphere and environment of their campus in an immeasurable way. Most high ranking schools look beyond grades because of that. That's what essays and/or interviews are for. More people than Harvard can admit have perfect SAT scores and 4.0s, and you should have developed a personality during your formative years as well as worked hard. They're trying to push out leaders.

  • @1xxicecatxx1
    @1xxicecatxx1 Před 5 lety

    Update soon plz! :)

  • @agginswaggin
    @agginswaggin Před 5 lety +2

    This is because of affirmitive action. Ethnicity shouldn't be considered at all

  • @susanpepper148
    @susanpepper148 Před 5 lety +297

    Just say youre native American Indian. Worked for Elizabeth Warren.

    • @D4n21
      @D4n21 Před 5 lety +36

      She actually listed herself as white when applying, so no it didn't.

    • @LegoMaster421
      @LegoMaster421 Před 5 lety +4

      She never went to Harvard for college

    • @susanpepper148
      @susanpepper148 Před 5 lety +20

      D4n21
      Warren said she checked native American Indian not white. Is Warren lying or are you wrong ?

    • @Frediloc8
      @Frediloc8 Před 5 lety +15

      Susan Pepper you are misinformed. There has been no evidence to support the unsubstantiated claim which was first put out by her then opponent Senator Scott Brown that she "checked the box claiming she was a Native American." www.snopes.com/fact-check/elizabeth-warren-wealthy-native-american/

    • @Laaaa
      @Laaaa Před 5 lety +20

      The Boston Globe did an extensive investigation on Warren and found that she did not benefit from any minority status in her jobs.

  • @juliansinclair3799
    @juliansinclair3799 Před 5 lety +4

    I'd say this is a bit of a stretch in it being "controversial". My education was an International Baccalaureate and the criteria are just as general and that's coming from one of the best and hardest highschool programs. Knowing an ex-Oxford admissions person (she's my bio teacher) they too use personal ratings, and they're absolutely necessary! Personal ratings aren't designed to judge a person for who he/she is, but rather to evaluate the traits with the course they are applying for. They look for leadership and abilities to talk in a doctor so they'll accept such people. Besides, Harvard just like any other university, is a business, and they want the best of the best to remain competitive.

    • @is8249
      @is8249 Před 2 lety

      Some ppl consider women in power to be aggressive and arrogant, but the same characteristics may be considered competitive and assertive for men. Such bias do exist.

  • @italoemmanoel8965
    @italoemmanoel8965 Před 5 lety

    Finally, I heard about it on JRE.

  • @tribopower
    @tribopower Před 5 lety +2

    Imagine doing an interview in harvard, wasting hours of your life studying and improving yourself to enter there, all that effort just in the end to receive a comment like "He's quiet and, of course,wants to be a doctor..." fml they can't even describe their candidates in more thant 1 phrase, what a prestine college...

    • @davyroger3773
      @davyroger3773 Před rokem

      "wasting hours of your life studying and improving yourself" might want to rethink that comment. If those things are a waste to someone then thats exactly the kind of person who should be rejected

  • @BeamingSplendor
    @BeamingSplendor Před 5 lety +7

    _>"Smart and hardworking yet uninteresting and indistinguishable"_
    I'm sorry if that offends you, but this is spot on for most Far East Asians...

    • @xMiso12x
      @xMiso12x Před 4 lety +8

      BeamingSplendor Being smart and hardworking is not enough for today’s competitive world. Charisma and socializing abilities are what separate a CEO from an employee.

    • @adokmazur7992
      @adokmazur7992 Před 4 lety +1

      @@xMiso12x absolutely, they want high IQ and EQ basically, that is easy to get indeed, but why make this racial anyway? Why 'indistinguishable from other asian americans'? Why are them being put into groups and judged from these groups instead of overall? Why even make these groups after all... I mean, do tall people have to be indistinguishable from other tall people too? Do they keep track of how on average muslims, eldery, disable, only childs, millionaires, etc behave, and judge them based on that? Why of all the similarities to judge people from, why race? And if this isn't consider racism, what is it consider then?

    • @wenkaiyang1487
      @wenkaiyang1487 Před 3 lety +2

      @@xMiso12x who told you they have to be CEO ? tons of scientists are weirdos. why do they need so much Charisma to be a doctor? Plus, how can you judge a person just based on a paragraph ? How could you determine a person's life in their 17s and tell them you are not becoming CEO ? If you just want to decline someone, you can always find some execuses to do so.

  • @arthurchase9381
    @arthurchase9381 Před 5 lety +3

    This is literally the suppression of a minority based on race...
    Does Harvard also support what Donald Trump stands for?

    • @beefsauce6051
      @beefsauce6051 Před 3 lety +1

      Donald Trump is literally against this.

  • @storybooks214
    @storybooks214 Před 5 lety +1

    In the future, I feel a new form of education is coming, and this problem will become a non-problem, because I believe we are moving away from exams, grades and scores so it will no longer be people who are deeming whether an applicant is good or bad but rather achievements or maybe reality itself is a better description. When that time comes, hard work will pay off without the risk of someone being able to nullify it in an interview...

  • @stevencvisuals
    @stevencvisuals Před 3 lety

    Imagine producing some of the best lawyers, and it being turned against you lol.

  • @rwf1449
    @rwf1449 Před 5 lety +6

    This doesn't seem racist. How else is Harvard supposed to use the personal essay and letters of recommendation without using some sort of scale? It makes sense that a personality score is needed or else it wouldn't make sense to have the aforementioned components as part of the application. In addition, not having a personality scale fails to acknowledge the different environments that students endured throughout their life. I can guarantee you that the students that get let in over "more qualified" applicants is mostly due to the ability to do well in school but not quite up to the level of the more qualified applicants but did it in a much shittier environment.

  • @ronanmurphy98
    @ronanmurphy98 Před 5 lety +6

    Over on this side of the pond the concept of affirmative action is peculiar at least and ridiculous at most. Admission to university bis based solely on academic history and potential, as it should be. I'm applying US colleges this year and I cannot get over the prevalance of race, skin colour and family history - it's insane.

    • @TheDevPlays
      @TheDevPlays Před 5 lety +1

      I was thinking of doing that too, but realized I dislike America culture in general (I live there sometimes, with my Dad,) and HATE the fact you have to do general education alongside your 'major'. I think British universities offer more vigorous teaching, also.

    • @jonnyfendi2003
      @jonnyfendi2003 Před 5 lety +1

      Keren Aguliar...girl please. Go to any inner city school in the United States, those kids don't want to learn.

    • @jonnyfendi2003
      @jonnyfendi2003 Před 5 lety

      Karen..THEY DONT WANT TO LEARN STUPID!!!! None of them. They act up and cause trouble.

    • @jonnyfendi2003
      @jonnyfendi2003 Před 5 lety

      @Karen Aguilar do you even understand the dynamics of a typical inner city school???? Get off your high horse you do don't know anything lilttle girl.

    • @giannigiovful
      @giannigiovful Před 5 lety +1

      Ronan Murphy For international admissions none of that matters except for money. Better hope you’re loaded with cash to the brim or have strong ties to powerful people.

  • @paulcaltabiano2183
    @paulcaltabiano2183 Před 5 lety +2

    I hope you know that not only good grades get you into good schools, who’s a college more likely to pick a person with good grades and joined no clubs? Or a person with clubs and good grades? Clubs and things out of school make people interesting for interviewers.

  • @user-qc8qj1zu2o
    @user-qc8qj1zu2o Před 5 lety

    Could I get a link to acces the documents myself

  • @dopemcee
    @dopemcee Před 5 lety +40

    thinking/wishing before reading comment section
    *please dont make this about black students*
    *please dont make this about black students*
    Reads comment.
    *inconclusive*
    These videos always end up being a diatribe about black students in the comment section...even though only like 2 black students get admitted in a class of 500...but they are the reason YOU didnt get into harvard or princeton

    • @rutha2403
      @rutha2403 Před 5 lety +4

      I don’t know enough information about affirmative action to have a strong opinion on it, but (in Harvard’s case) why do people think black students are taking other races spots? They make up such a small percentage, so black student admissions shouldn’t have that big of an effect. Also it seems that people don’t think the black people Harvard accepts are intelligent enough to be there, like they’re not going to let in someone with low credentials in for the sake of diversity, y’all should at least know that.

    • @derek7762
      @derek7762 Před 5 lety +1

      Ruth A they take up a huge chunk they don’t deserve, almost all black students accepted to prestigious universities are student athletes given easy majors and paper classes

    • @rutha2403
      @rutha2403 Před 5 lety +1

      Bokononist I know student athletes don’t necessarily have the stats required for top ranked universities, but I’m not too sure there are so many that they take up a “huge chunk”. Also how would you know if they don’t deserve admission or not?

    • @chunhaylee
      @chunhaylee Před 5 lety

      Actually black students make up 15.2% of Harvard's latest admitted class:
      college.harvard.edu/admissions/admissions-statistics
      So blacks are actually well over-represented a Harvard, since blacks make up only 12% of the population. So it is not true at all that blacks only make up 2 of 500. Now of course, white students are also admitted into Harvard ahead of asian students who have higher scores. So this is not asians against blacks. This is asians against whites, blacks and hispanics.

    • @notsure6187
      @notsure6187 Před 5 lety

      black students are given a bonus of 230 points and Asians are penalized 50 points.

  • @shan6553
    @shan6553 Před 5 lety +4

    If you stop at 3:31 and read the page that appears, it says Harvard see African American and Hispanic as positive factors, and often emphasize to look for these applicants.

  • @billbuffett2092
    @billbuffett2092 Před 5 lety

    My friend is studying at Harvard and it was very easy for him to enter Harvard. My friend's father gave a generous financial donation and later Harvard informed him that his son was admitted.

  • @flyferrari458
    @flyferrari458 Před 5 lety +2

    I’m watching this as is, Im going to apply lol.