lawtonfogle
My solace my terror, my terror my solace.
You should not accept him, but for a different reason. If he is unable to give proof of education and you are unable to run a general background check on his legal status, he should not be accepted. The child and HIV thing are not metrics used in grad school application (at least not to my knowledge), so I do not see why his likely hood of either of those would change the situation. If, for some odd reason, race was all that your university supplied you with to pick who you take as a Masters student... I would personally quit the university.So if I have a black applicant to my masters program, I shouldn't accept him simply because I know that African Americans are less educated than the norm, correct? Besides, he's more likely to have been in prison, more likely to have an illegitimate child, and more likely to have contracted HIV. I should assume all of this about him, right?
Wouldn't you instead look as his score?I should also assume that the Korean who has applied will do well, as Asians tend to score far higher on Academic Proficiency tests, yes?
Because you better be gathering more information to make your selection off of. The base rate only applies when there is no other information, and in fact, all information gather does is create a more complicated base rate (such as, an applicant to an undergraduate institution who has a high GPA, SAT, ACT, and strong recommendations has a base rate of doing great at uni, but they may not always be.How is this not the "base rate?" I mean other than "racism is bad?"
So to put it basically, if you were allowed no other information about your applicants other than race, and you were not given the option of quitting the university, then basing it off of what race is likely to be best is what you will have to do (but remember, you are not looking at each individual race, but instead the subset of members of each individual race which applies to grad school, which may be a vastly different base rate than the race alone).
That said, I find that situation unlikely in even diploma mills, much less respectable universities.
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