By Professor Doom
In the 20th
century, the American “system” of higher education affected how the whole world
performed education and research at the highest levels. It’s now the 21st
century, and the corrupted American system is spreading that corruption across
the planet. How else to explain the following madness:
Huh.
And here I thought academia was about scholarship, not about being
“disadvantaged.”
Before dissecting this article, I remind
the gentle reader that a British study showed, quite clearly, that going to university decreases your income. How can Oxford, in the face of this study,
determine that it should hurt the disadvantaged further by putting more of them
in college? How vile is virtue-signaling when it forces you to hurt the very
people you claim you want to help?
Like every school in the US, Oxford beats
its chest often about how much it’s doing for “those people.” As always, it’s
never enough:
But
vice-chancellor Louise Richardson says she wants to "accelerate the pace
at which we are diversifying".
Well, at least her
name isn’t twice as long as her title. But I really want to point out these
people are paid huge sums of money, but have yet to say anything more clever
than “more.”
Oxford,
along with other top universities, has faced claims of perpetuating privilege -
with too many privately-educated students and not enough from poorer
backgrounds.
Seriously, why don’t these people know anything? Yes, these schools are where the children of the rich
often go, but slamming more poor kids into these “elite” schools isn’t going to
change anything. We tried this with the public schools, and all that happened
was the wealthy pulled their kids out of such schools, and put them into
private schools.
Why
would anyone suspect the same thing won’t happen when schools like Oxford try
this stunt? Granted, a 900 year old school like Oxford has a great reputation,
but it’ll be destroyed over time with policies like these, I’ve seen it often
enough over here--Harvard's repeated (and often self-inflicted) black eyes certainly haven't done it any good.
Interesting. Exactly how many black students should Oxford have? Why
does nobody else think this is a reasonable question? Of course, there will
never be an answer to this question, beyond the obvious “more.”
Maybe there should be more, but before we smash a 900 year old school in
the name of Diversity, shouldn’t we have some justification beyond a clear
desire to hurt “disadvantaged” students?
At
present about 15% of Oxford's undergraduate students are from deprived areas -
and the university wants to increase this significantly to 25% over the next
four years.
So,
what’s the definition of “deprived,” here, and how much of the country is so
deprived? The latter is rather important. If 5% of the country is deprived,
then Oxford is doing a bang-up job of hurting deprived people (as per the study
I cited), and thus doesn’t need to hurt a larger percentage.
Once again, because nothing is defined, the people raking in the real
money from all this can just keep asking for “more.”
Actually the article does get into definitions:
What counts as
disadvantaged?
It is not by income thresholds
or ethnicity, but is mainly based on a socio-economic profile of where people
live.
This uses two postcode-based
systems, called Polar and Acorn, which measure local levels of deprivation or
affluence.
Basically whoever they say is disadvantaged, is disadvantaged. These
measures strike me as pretty arbitrary, which I grant is something you want
when you’re just going to ask for “more” no matter how much you get.
All
this emphasis on hurting the poor by putting them in Oxford, while still
allowing as many wealthy as usual, means, by definition the “middle,” the not
poor or wealthy, are going to be squeezed out. This seems like a rational conclusion
to me.
Such an
analysis is rejected by Oxford - with the university saying there is no reason
to assume that so many places will go to private school pupils in the future.
In
the near future, the above is rubbish: there are only a finite number of slots
at Oxford. If you’re not reducing slots for the rich, while forcing extra slots
to the poor, then it’s obvious the middle class will be excluded.
That said, in due time, this won’t be an issue: as Oxford’s reputation
crumbles into ruin, there won’t be quite so many wealthy applicants (much like
what happened in the US public school system).
While many Oxford students do come from private schools, a solid
majority are still coming from those state schools, where middle class (and, yes,
the disadvantaged) all have a decent opportunity to learn:
The
next round of entry figures, covering 2018, will show 60.5% of students from
state schools, more than about 58% in the two previous years, and the highest
in these records going back more than 40 years.
Oxford is a top school, I imagine most every wealthy parent with a smart
enough offspring would be thrilled to have him there. And yet after meeting
this demand, Oxford still has enough space for over 60% of their students to
come from the non-wealthy classes. Do over 60% of the non-wealthy live in
mansions? Do over 60% of the non-wealthy take regular overseas vacations? Do
over 60% of the non-wealthy do the things we associate with the wealthy? Of
course not.
And yet, in the face of this egalitarian achievement by Oxford, only one
word is ever heard:
“More.”
The more "disadvantaged" (=dumb and/or unmotivated) students they admit, the more basic services the administrators will have to provide, the bigger their kingdoms will grow.
ReplyDeleteAnd, of course, they can preen and polish their Leftist credentials in the glow of their "good intentions".
Ultimately you are correct; thank you for highlighting what I neglected to mention.
DeleteHarvard's endowment is $38mil and counting.
ReplyDelete