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Hmmm: Top STEM College Caltech drops calculus, chemistry and physics requirements "if your school didn't offer them"
Hotair ^ | 08/31/2023 | Beege Welborn

Posted on 08/31/2023 9:12:50 PM PDT by SeekAndFind

ZOMG! Have the brainiacs followed the yellowoke path to diversity, equity, and inclusion mediocrity?

Caltech drops calculus, chemistry, physics class requirements if your school doesn't offer them, allowing you to take Khan Academy instead.

Doesn't seem that crazy. Until you notice they also got rid of the SAT, so it's all about diversity over merit. https://t.co/NcCtGXSC2u

— Richard Hanania (@RichardHanania) August 31, 2023

Ehhhh…not quite yet. Jury’s out.

What they’re planning sounds like a reasonable work-around for particularly gifted, but educationally deprived students who aspire to greater things. The young lady the reporter begins the story with went to a school that didn’t offer algebra in 8th grade. But she busted her butt, and was able to double up in her sophomore year to catch up to calculus by her senior.

That chance isn’t there for every student who might want to take a shot at attending an institution with stringent entrance requirements like Caltech. These changes are meant to level that playing field.

And scores of students don’t even have that chance, because more than one-third of the nation’s high schools don’t offer calculus, and many also lack physics and chemistry classes, two other Caltech admission requirements. For years, the institute, a global powerhouse of science, technology, engineering and math education, fielded hundreds of calls each year from distraught students and parents about the issue. But Caltech held firm, making no exceptions, even for “absolutely astounding” applicants, as one faculty member put it.

Now California Institute of Technology, in the name of equity, is shifting gears. In a groundbreaking step, the campus announced Thursday that it will drop admission requirements for calculus, physics and chemistry courses for students who don’t have access to them and offer alternative paths to prove mastery of the material.

But not having it available in high school isn’t a free pass – a student still has to take course and pass a subject certification exam, or Caltech will also accept a score of 5 on AP exams and a score of 6 or 7 on International Baccalaureate exams So this new program isn’t a gimme, per se. The ability has to be proven prior to being accepted.

…One of Caltech’s alternative paths is taking Khan Academy‘s free, online classes and scoring 90% or higher on a certification test. Sal Khan, academy founder, said Caltech’s action is a “huge deal” for equitable access to college. While Caltech is small — only 2,400 students, about 40% of them undergraduates — Khan said he hoped its prestigious reputation would encourage other institutions to examine their admission barriers and find creative solutions to ease them.

…“You have one of the most academically rigorous schools on the planet that has arguably one of the highest bars for admission, saying that an alternative pathway that is free and accessible to anyone is now a means to meeting their requirements,” said Khan, whose nonprofit offers free courses, test prep and tutoring to more than 152 million users.

I do like the way they went about developing the program. It’s funny when a light goes on for 800lb brain academics. Like, “You mean there are high schools where they don’t teach calculus?” They are so insulated sometimes.

…The impetus for the policy change began in February, when Pallie, the admissions director, and two Caltech colleagues attended a workshop on equity hosted by the National Assn. for College Admission Counseling. They were particularly struck by one speaker, Melodie Baker of Just Equations, a nonprofit that seeks to widen math opportunities. As Baker pointed out the lack of access to calculus for many students, Pallie and her team began to question Caltech’s admission requirement for the course, along with physics and chemistry.

Pallie and Jared Leadbetter, a professor of environmental microbiology who heads the faculty admissions committee, began to look into potential course alternatives. Pallie connected with Khan’s team, which started a second nonprofit, Schoolhouse.world, during the pandemic in 2020 to offer free tutoring. Peer tutors on the platform certify they are qualified for their jobs by scoring at least 90% on the course exam and videotaping themselves explaining how they solved each problem on it. The video helps ensure that the students actually took the exam themselves and understand the material.

That video feature gave Caltech assurances about the integrity of the alternative path.

They had undergrads take the Khan Academy courses, too, to check out the actual academic rigor and got approval from those kids. With the undergrads recommending additional materials to augment the course, because, well, you’re going to Caltech.

Understandably, there were some qualms expressed, but the overall feeling is positive.

…Leadbetter said some faculty voiced caution about the new path, but a majority of governing board members approved the change without objection. “If we’re really trying to beat the bushes for these really rare students with this exceptional sort of tenacity and resilience and promise, then we really don’t want to be missing large segments” of potential applicants, he said.

Yeah – I guess when you only have a 3% admission rate, I would guess you’d want a wider pool of candidates if you could possibly find a way to broaden it but without compromising your standards?

That remains to be seen, and the verbiage is worrying from the team, as it is chockful of those buzzwords.

…”educational desert”…

…Pallie said the new policy will give meaning to a key part of Caltech’s mission statement on equity: “While talent is distributed broadly, opportunity is not.”…

…“I think that we’re really in a time where institutions have to decide if everything that they’ve been saying about diversity and equity and inclusion is true,” …

*shiver*

The tell will be if they do away with the first year requirements which everyone must take. I mean, it’s no cakewalk.

alt
Screencap Caltech

I sure hope not. They’re a pretty intense bunch of eggheads who do cool things.

I’d hate to see that watered down by racist #mathz driven mediocrity and all the rest of living with everyday woke drivel.



TOPICS: Education; Science; Society
KEYWORDS: caltech; requirements; stem
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To: dr_lew2

I’d start saving the textbooks, because we will need them to rebuild society once we have moved these biastards along.


21 posted on 08/31/2023 9:51:32 PM PDT by Jonty30 (If liberals were truth tellers, they'd call themselves literals. )
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To: SeekAndFind

Well, if a lot of Chicoms enroll, and do not learn methods they could use to attack us, perhaps this will be a good thing. The USA citizens who want to keep America safe could enroll at Hillsdale College if they haven’t already had the necessary courses.

Heck, if any Chicoms actually enroll and spend 4 years at Hillsdale, they might return to China and spy for the USA.


22 posted on 08/31/2023 9:57:28 PM PDT by Ronaldus Magnus III (Do, or do not, there is no try)
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To: SeekAndFind

Many schools are no longer teaching the hard sciences and math. The geniuses already know it, and computers and calculators do the grunt work anyway, not people.


23 posted on 08/31/2023 10:00:45 PM PDT by rexthecat
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To: rexthecat

Well, now it’s AI !

( If I was smart, I would know how to make a giant “AI” . )


24 posted on 08/31/2023 10:22:34 PM PDT by dr_lew2
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To: dr_lew2

This is nothing new for them.

When I was there 50 plus years ago they didn’t accept the HS guys with briefcases. They wanted intelligent guys who colored outside the lines.

Sounds like you would have fit in.

Feynman was a trip. I knew nothing of his status at the time but enjoyed his lecture more than i can describe.


25 posted on 08/31/2023 10:30:04 PM PDT by IAMIUBU
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To: SeekAndFind

A 5 on the AP Exam is actually even better than a solid SAT score for those subjects.


26 posted on 08/31/2023 10:37:07 PM PDT by Dr. Sivana ("If you can’t say something nice . . . say the Rosary." [Red Badger])
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To: Right Brother; Jonty30

Top STEM no more.

-fJRoberts-


27 posted on 08/31/2023 10:57:08 PM PDT by A strike (Words can have gender, humans cannot.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Seriously?!
The tyrant WEF totalitarian rulers are not obvious enough to you yet ??


28 posted on 08/31/2023 11:05:18 PM PDT by A strike (Words can have gender, humans cannot.)
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To: dr_lew2
Went on to a career in programming at Bell Labs ...

BTW, this accounts for my FR login ID. I had a coworker who, in recognition of my academic status, addressed me as "Doctor Lew" , which was no doubt intended as a gentle jibe, but I rather liked it!

29 posted on 08/31/2023 11:10:13 PM PDT by dr_lew2
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To: SeekAndFind

All of those courses could be taken in Junior College.


30 posted on 08/31/2023 11:30:44 PM PDT by jonrick46 (Leftniks chase illusions of motherships at the end of the pier.)
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To: SeekAndFind
a student still has to take course and pass a subject certification exam, or Caltech will also accept a score of 5 on AP exams and a score of 6 or 7 on International Baccalaureate exams

Sounds like good news. Many homeschooled students take alternate routes, such as AP tests. I know many who did well in college STEM majors and went on to earn graduate degrees.

31 posted on 08/31/2023 11:51:30 PM PDT by Tired of Taxes
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To: SeekAndFind

if an aptitude towards STEM isn’t required for STEM then what’s the point?

political leanings are all they’re looking to admit and promote.

this is how they gain and maintain power.


32 posted on 09/01/2023 12:15:09 AM PDT by sten (fighting tyranny never goes out of style)
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To: Jonty30

Well....got a 3 billion or so endowment...35% asian student population, 23% white, 22% Hispanic, 3% black...so it can’t be money only....most likely social engineering...
Found out my alma mater gave out 50 percent or so “A”’s to the students last year. I guess bell curves are elitist, racist, and homophobic.

I think diplomas there are now printed on toilet paper. The diplomas as such would be more useful.


33 posted on 09/01/2023 12:25:24 AM PDT by Getready (Wisdom is more valuable than gold and harder to find.)
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To: ifinnegan

Are you trying to destroy the false narrative that is being bandied about? /s


34 posted on 09/01/2023 12:26:27 AM PDT by DennisR (Look around - God gives countless clues that He does, indeed, exist.)
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To: Getready

That’s how they get their endowment increased, giving away diplomas.


35 posted on 09/01/2023 12:42:28 AM PDT by Jonty30 (If liberals were truth tellers, they'd call themselves literals. )
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To: SeekAndFind

Read more carefully. I did not read what you just said.


36 posted on 09/01/2023 12:55:37 AM PDT by ifinnegan (Democrats kill babies and harvest their organs to sell)
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To: Jonty30

I agree.


37 posted on 09/01/2023 12:57:07 AM PDT by ifinnegan (Democrats kill babies and harvest their organs to sell)
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To: Jonty30

The Biden era students will be known as incompetents.


38 posted on 09/01/2023 3:19:34 AM PDT by Chickensoup (Genocide is here. Leftist extremists are spearheading the Genocide against conservatives. )
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To: All

The problem is that this shit won’t stop at allowing Khan Academy to replace a few courses on a transcript. The “logic” behind this decision is cancerous. The most qualified applicants will still be those with math/science Olympiad medals, science fair winners, people who have conducted research at their local university, etc. What then? Will the standards be changed because not everyone has parents that care enough to give their children those opportunities? You can bet your ass they will if these people continue to have influence.

BTW, a truly motivated student who didn’t have access to those classes at their high school would take them from the local community college. In fact, many applicants to CalTech, MIT, etc. take courses beyond single variable calc through such schools. The options are already there. There’s just a certain community that doesn’t push its children and we all know what that community is.


39 posted on 09/01/2023 3:58:10 AM PDT by Stravinsky
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To: ifinnegan

RE: Read more carefully. I did not read what you just said.

Maybe you can explain it in a little more detail…


40 posted on 09/01/2023 4:26:17 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
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