

Can you guys tell me which public schools accept a lot of out of state students?
Crazybob: Thanks. Are you happy with where you're going? How many schools did you apply to?
As a taxpayer, I would want my state public school to take a majority of instate students. I mean we are funding it through our tax dollars, why should educate a large proportion of out-of state residents?
Well, it depends if an out of state applicant can bring something to the school. Say a public school in Nebraska is mainly Caucasian, they might find a Latino applicant from California as a way to diversify their school. They may think that's well worth the investment in the long term.
Well, it depends if an out of state applicant can bring something to the school. Say a public school in Nebraska is mainly Caucasian, they might find a Latino applicant from California as a way to diversify their school. They may think that's well worth the investment in the long term.
Except when that student then goes back to Cali to practice. Just usin an example
You don't always need RACE to make a school diverse.
My school is probably more than 95% white. My first year class is 95% white.
So you're saying your school is diverse?
A group of people can be dissimilar and divergent without needing to be different colors.
So you're saying your school is diverse? Let's face it, the reason why your school is 95% white is b/c not many minorities would want to go to a school like that. That's why I believe state schools have an incentive to accept out of state, diverse students to reduce this exclusivity.
We have people who used to be in the army, a guy who used to work for IT, people from different parts of the state, a girl who has been involved with Miss Arkansas, several people who have been teachers before coming to pharmacy school, etc. Stuff like that.
Perhaps your'e right, I just see it differently. Race does matter in America, I just don't want people to condone it.
Does being from LA (the city) count as diverse? I'm Asian and I feel like that doesn't help.
Does anyone even have solid statistics that being black or native american or hispanic or another under represented minority even makes a difference in pharmacy school admissions?
Doesn't make a difference in UCs. Proposition 209 (or was it 204?) made it illegal in California to consider any of those qualities for admissions purposes (from a purely statistical stand point).
You do know that the UC reversed the ban on A.A. in 2001? I believe it's still illegal but not enforced. No one likes to talk about it.
You do know that the UC Board of Regents reversed the ban on A.A. in 2001? I believe it's still illegal but not enforced. No one really likes to talk about it.
http://www.ucsc.edu/currents/00-01/05-21/regents.html
SP-1 and SP-2, the regental policies that prohibited the use of preferences in university admissions, employment, and contracting practices, were approved in July 1995. While eliminating SP-1 and SP-2, the university is still governed by a similar ban incorporated into the California Constitution through Proposition 209, the state measure passed by California voters in November 1996.
They reversed the policies SP-1 and SP-2. Prop 209 is still in effect.
From the article...
UCLA's in 06/07/08 entering class was something like <2% African American. A lot of the UCs are >30% Asian ... there's no way this could continue if they kept a quota for URMs. UCSD is 49% Asian, 2% African American. UCLA is 38% Asian, 3% African American. UCI is 55% asian, 2% African American. 😱
Politicians don't like to talk about anything about race unless it gets them votes. Statistics show otherwise about it existing or not. Minority acceptances dropped after 209 was passed. Asian acceptances and attendance rocketed upwards. Overall graduation rates in the UCs increased and the graduation rates of URMs also went up significantly after Prop 209. Plenty of statistical evidence within the UC system before and after Prop 209 showing that it is still being followed, at least as a soft guide line if not a hard rule.
I guess what I'm getting at is the fact that Asian doesn't really seem to qualify as URM. Many schools already have quite a large percentage of Asian students. So, I thought Asians weren't "underrepresented." I didn't know that it was a matter of where you're from that would determine your eligibility for URM.