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Elizabeth's avatar

In 1973 I made the first Title 9 complaint against the University of California regarding its discriminatory admissions policies. At that time there was a quota on female admissions of about 35% and less in some majors. Admission was pretty subjective and knowing someone personally shot you to the top. 20 years later I went back to CAL and took a bunch of courses. Perusing the EdPsyc library, I came across test scores by racial group dividing male and female scores. That testing showed, in many groups, a 15 point difference in IQ, with women having the higher scores. That said, we know that top scorers are often men, who have a greater divergence. Now we have the internet and social media; porn, gambling, nonsense. Men are drawn to these destructive time-wasters. Women are not. The result is more time for brain development by girls. Having raised both a boy and girl, and thought about this a lot, I wonder if now our admissions criteria fail to take into account the diverse spectrum of talent and intelligence of boys. Yes they had a benefit before Title 9. But did they need it? When I went to school, men and women were friends. We spent time together and did things: book groups, rock climbing, just hanging out. Now look at all of the hostile nuttiness taking place…some random thoughts.

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Alex Cranberg's avatar

You give a strong argument that I largely agree with. One big exception: universities should have the right to be what they want to be as long as their policies comply with the law. If a private university for social or cultural reasons wants to be any ratio of men to women (from 100% to 50% to 0%) why shouldn’t that be their choice? You would be correct to argue that this is contrary to a meritocracy goal, and that admissions policies are hidden. Therefore the correct action is for some universities to just come clean and acknowledge that their desire for a particular gender mix may result different admission standards.

A basic problem in higher education is that it often claims to be something that it isn’t.

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