(cont'd from yesterday's post)
You have to wonder, how in the world did it happen that America's elite universities went from honorable to dishonorable in a few years? Part of the answer is that it's taken decades, not just a few years, to make the transition.
"Merit" has been abandoned.
Many may assume that students earn good grades by doing good work. That used to be the case. But other criteria may now qualify students to receive good grades, not work at a high level. Grade "inflation" means no poor grades are given, even when poor work is done.
Some probably still assume that university admissions are awarded because the applicant has earned the right to be admitted. That used to be the case. But now admissions are awarded on the basis of other factors such as ethnic group, "oppressed" status, race, money.
Harvard's admissions practices were ruled "unconstitutional" by the Supreme Court last summer. The Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (FIRE) gave Harvard the worst score ever in its free speech rankings, a score of zero percent out of 100%.
from "How Were the Universities Lost?"
(cont'd tomorrow)
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