• TubularTittyFrog@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      pretty much.

      the asian case against Harvard was a bunch of rich asians being pissed they didn’t get more ‘slots’ at an ivy league school as their ticket to money and power. they had to ‘settle’ for their kids going to schools one step down where they will still have plenty of access to power and money… but they just won’t be the most ‘elite’.

      both sides are greedy power hungry bastards. they just swap who they blame for societies problems

            • SatansMaggotyCumFart@piefed.world
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              2 months ago

              State applications for funding were scored on selection criteria worth a total of 500 points. In order of weight, the selection criteria were:[3] Great teachers and leaders (138 total points) Improving teacher and principal effectiveness based on performance (58 points) Ensuring equitable distribution of effective teachers and principals (25 points) Providing high-quality pathways for aspiring teachers and principals (21 points) Providing effective support to teachers and principals (20 points) Improving the effectiveness of teacher and principal preparation programs (14 points) State success factors (125 total points) Articulating state’s education reform agenda and LEAs’ participation in it (65 points) Building strong statewide capacity to implement, scale up, and sustain proposed plans (30 points) Demonstrating significant progress in raising achievement and closing gaps (30 points) Standards and assessments (70 total points) Developing and adopting common standards (40 points) Supporting the transition to enhanced standards and high-quality assessments (20 points) Developing and implementing common, high-quality assessments (10 points) General selection criteria (55 total points) Ensuring successful conditions for high-performing charters and other innovative schools (40 points) Making education funding a priority (10 points) Demonstrating other significant reform conditions (5 points) Turning around the lowest-achieving schools (50 total points) Turning around the lowest-achieving schools (40 points) Intervening in the lowest-achieving schools and LEAs (10 points) Data systems to support instruction (47 total points) Fully implementing a statewide longitudinal data system (24 points) Using data to improve instruction (18 points) Accessing and using State data (5 points) In addition to the 485 possible points from the selection criteria above, applicants were assessed based on six priorities, including the prioritization of STEM (science, technology, engineering, and math) education which is worth another fifteen points for a possible total of 500.[3] Priority 1, absolute priority: comprehensive approach to education reform Priority 2, competitive preference priority: emphasis on science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) (This priority was worth 15 points, bringing the “selection criteria” total to 500 points) Priority 3, invitational priority: innovations for improving early learning outcomes Priority 4, invitational priority: expansion and adaptation of statewide longitudinal data systems Priority 5, invitational priority: P-20 coordination, vertical and horizontal alignment Priority 6, invitational priority: school-level conditions for reform, innovation, and learning The applications for Race to the Top were bolstered by local involvement: states were incentivized to get buy-in from school district superintendents and teacher unions; applications required signatures from the states’ education chiefs, governors, and attorneys general in order to qualify.[3]

              What’s your problem with this?

      • TubularTittyFrog@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        https://www.thecrimson.com/article/2022/7/13/faculty-survey-political-leaning/

        2% of the harvard faculty identify as conservative, and only 16% are moderate. it’s a problem.

        years ago it was more like 20% conservative, still a minority but way more representative of the general population.

        some of my best professors were ‘conservative’ in my time at uni. In today’s environment they’d have never been allowed to hired because they would have ‘disqualifying’ beliefs. That’s messed up.

        there is also systematic problem with these kinds of incredibly lopsided faculty environments that create a orthodoxy that is inherently problematic to have at an institution of inquiry and learning. exposure to different ideas allows you to challege such orthodoxy. I don’t want anyone going to uni to be subject an orthodoxy.