Posted on 03/15/2019 6:12:15 AM PDT by C19fan
The FBI charged a list of well-heeled parents, including actors Felicity Huffman and Lori Loughlin, with fraud on March 12. Their alleged goal: to get their kids into top schools, including Yale and Stanford. The public reactions ranged from outrage to cynicism. The outrage: These parents think they can buy their kids anything. The cynicism: These parents could have done the same thing legally by charitably funding a new building or two. All this aside, the admissions scandal is an opportunity to separate the lofty mythology of college from the sordid reality. Despite the grand aspirations that students avow on their admission essays, their overriding goal is not enlightenment, but status.
(Excerpt) Read more at time.com ...
Let’s not assume that this is the first crime or moral compromise these lowlifes made on the way accumulating their wealth. Rich scum is still scum.
WRT STATUS SCHOOLS:
Nancy’s daughter, Alexandra Pelosi, graduated from USC’s prestigious Annenberg School for Communication in 1993.
Howd she get in? Mom use the pull of campaign bucks?
Is there a single institution in this country that has any integrity?
In a warped, backhanded way this scandal advances the socialist agenda.
“The game really IS rigged! There IS NO meritocracy! You’re gettin’ SCROOOOOOD!!”
--Peter Thiel, famous Silicon Valley venture capitalist
For sure.
Academia is a house of cards.
American taxpayers are consistently conned so this ‘myth’ may be prepetuated
Education? Enlightenment? Not on your life. It has nothing to do with any of that.
It’s a real Ponzi con with the faculty and administrators at the top if the food chain. Without fed $$$$ so subsidize their BS, they’d be on the street- struggling to find a ‘real’ job-and most of them would go home disappointed!!
Words strung together into one big grammatically correct mass of no meaning.
I thought USC was where you went to play Football if you wanted to get drafted by the NFL.
I want one of these pundits — preferably a liberal one — to write a column explaining why nobody in this case paid even a $100 bribe to get their kids into Howard University.
Gives new meaning of going with the flow.
They started out as essentially Bible colleges, but within two generations they became full liberal art institutions awarding only one degree and that was in philosophy. In order to be admitted you had to have a reading knowledge of Greek and a working knowledge of Latin. Your capstone class was moral philosophy (which is the study of ethics, virtue and vice) and on graduation day you were expected to debate your professor in Latin in front of your entire graduating class.
Half of our Founders graduated from a colonial college. The other half, like Benjamin Franklin, desired to go to college but was unable to do so. Our Constitution could have been written and debated in Latin.
Far cry from a bachelors at Harvard today. They would be absolutely appalled at this bribery case.
I'd rather entrust the government of the United States to the first 400 people listed in the Boston telephone directory than to the faculty of Harvard University.
-- William F. Buckley
Hillsdale College
I’d say he nailed it.
Bottom line in all of this is another push for free college for anyone who wants it. So we all be equal.
Still agenda driven.
I think they'd be more appalled that people would actually pay $300,000+ bribes to get their kids into such mediocre institutions.
"The question is why. Both these families are wealthy. The children of these families werent going to lack for opportunity in life. Furthermore, isnt college designed to train people for the real world? Wouldnt admission under false pretenses result in the kids flunking out? Wouldnt their lack of merit be revealed by the simple pressure of the schooling?
The answer is obvious: no, it wouldnt. Colleges arent about training kids for the real world, or teaching them significant modes of thinking, or examining timeless truths. Universities arent about skill sets, either at least in the humanities. Theyre about two things: credentialism and social connections.
In our society, there is an easy way to be perceived as intellectually meritorious: point to your degree. Those with a college degree all-too-often sneer at those without one, as though lack of a college degree were an indicator of innate ability or future lack of success. That simply isnt true. But for generations, the widespread perception has been that the smartest kids go to college and that the relative merit of each college confers a similar level of merit on the students. A student who goes to Yale is smarter than one who goes to junior college. This provides a lifelong advantage: employers are willing to take more chances on those who earn a Yale degree than those who went to junior college, for example.
Then theres social connection. Social institutions in the United States have been fading over time. Churches used to provide us our chief means of social connection. Colleges now do. JD Vance writes in Hillbilly Elegy that admission to Yale Law School granted him social capital: the networks of people and institutions around us have real economic value. They also have social value. We often get jobs from friends, or from friends of friends. The social circles in which we travel matter. Thats true for those born rich as well as those born poor.
Heres the problem: neither of these priorities actually demands that universities teach anything. Credentialism occurs upon admission, so long as you arent thrown out of school; social capital begins to accrue with presence, not with performance. Hence colleges watering down curricula and grades in order to make it easier to credential, and to generate less friction. Thats what students and parents demand: not skills, not education, but credentialism and social capital.
After I was admitted to Harvard Law School, I attended orientation. Our 500-strong class was gathered in Memorial Hall, in historic Sanders Theater, where then-Dean Elena Kagan (now Supreme Court Justice) spoke to us. She informed us that the competition was over we were in! No need to worry about the stuff wed seen in The Paper Chase we were all going to leave with degrees and jobs. Not just that as graduates of Harvard Law, we were destined to rule the universe. She informed us of how many alumni were in the Senate, how many in Congress, how many on the Supreme Court. The battle was over upon our acceptance to the institution."
Hillsdale College.
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