UC San Diego is leaning right (Math Woes)

3,114 Views | 30 Replies | Last: 1 mo ago by Maroon Dawn
Over_ed
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AG
US News and World Report ranks UC San Diego as the 6th best public university - ahead of A&M and t.u. TBH, I want to laugh when the top schools are all liberal cesspools where the average grade is an "A", but that is for another post.

In any case, those conservative (Fascist is really more appropriate) Faculty at UCSD are upset because students can't do math. Like 900 incoming freshmen cannot do math at the MIDDLE SCHOOL level. 900 is about 1/8th of the freshman class

  • Only 87% of incoming freshmen could do a first-grade math problem.
  • Only 19% could solve an 8th grade fractions problem.
This is a school where many students have AP calculus credits.
Nope, it's not a story from the Bee.

So anyway, these reactionary, Faculty opposers of all things fair and right, are talking about bringing back the SAT test and setting minimum cut-offs. They got rid of the SAT because it unfairly disadvantaged the "usual" groups. And I suspect they see the writing on the wall - things aren't going to get better with students using AI.

I am very glad that such a thing can't happen at Texas flagship institutions like A&M and t.u.

Admitting students based purely on HS grades would be really stupid, wouldn't it?

the full faculty report: https://senate.ucsd.edu/media/740347/sawg-report-on-admissions-review-docs.pdf
doubledog
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The university rating game is more or less subjective to the raters. TAMU rarely breaks the top 10 (overall) due to its relatively weak liberal arts program (thus the recent merging of liberal arts and sciences at TAMU) and the impact it has on the rating game. As proof: TAMU consistently ranks in the top 10 in sciences, agriculture, buisness and engineering.
Over_ed
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AG
doubledog said:

The university rating game is more or less subjective to the raters. TAMU rarely breaks the top 10 (overall) due to its relatively weak liberal arts program (thus the recent merging of liberal arts and sciences at TAMU) and the impact it has on the rating game. As proof: TAMU consistently ranks in the top 10 in sciences, agriculture and engineering.

Yep. And I admit I have a bias (business, engineering/tech/stat) degrees.

But, at this point is a strong Liberal Arts program an asset for a University? My answer is no.
doubledog
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Over_ed said:

doubledog said:

The university rating game is more or less subjective to the raters. TAMU rarely breaks the top 10 (overall) due to its relatively weak liberal arts program (thus the recent merging of liberal arts and sciences at TAMU) and the impact it has on the rating game. As proof: TAMU consistently ranks in the top 10 in sciences, agriculture and engineering.

Yep. And I admit I have a bias (business, engineering/tech/stat) degrees.

But, at this point is a strong Liberal Arts program an asset for a University? My answer is no.

This is why ranking universities is a "game". Most rankers are media professionals (liberal arts). Two other ranking factor that weighs against TAMU and t.u. is their student/faculty ratio and their "reputation". The "reputation" factor is very subjective and is very much part of the game.
K2-HMFIC
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https://substack.com/@noahpinion/note/p-179897140?r=1q05vy&utm_medium=ios&utm_source=notes-share-action

Noah Smith just wrote a piece on this as well.


Quote:

The basic story is that the education reform movement spearheaded by George W. Bush, which focused on improving test scores, collapsed in the mid-2010s. After that, public schools across the country began to lower their standards passing kids who didn't know the material, making their curricula a lot easier, etc. Often, kids just skip class entirely in Oregon, around a third of all schoolchildren are chronically absent from school.

This was sometimes done in the name of "equity" even though the new lax policies lead to widening racial and gender gaps. The rise of phones in schools probably exacerbated the trend, as did the pandemic, but the fundamental cause is lax standards everywhere.
Over_ed
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AG
K2-HMFIC said:

https://substack.com/@noahpinion/note/p-179897140?r=1q05vy&utm_medium=ios&utm_source=notes-share-action

Noah Smith just wrote a piece on this as well.


Quote:

The basic story is that the education reform movement spearheaded by George W. Bush, which focused on improving test scores, collapsed in the mid-2010s. After that, public schools across the country began to lower their standards passing kids who didn't know the material, making their curricula a lot easier, etc. Often, kids just skip class entirely in Oregon, around a third of all schoolchildren are chronically absent from school.

This was sometimes done in the name of "equity" even though the new lax policies lead to widening racial and gender gaps. The rise of phones in schools probably exacerbated the trend, as did the pandemic, but the fundamental cause is lax standards everywhere.



Good friend, pretty senior prof at one of the local Community Colleges. She was planning to work another 5 years, now looking to quit next year. She can't in good conscience pass as many as her administration demands.

Realize this sounds like "Old Man Yelling at Sky" but this is becoming an unsolvable problem. The dudes in San Diego can reinstitute SAT, but that will be a temporary patch.

Too many parents just don't see their kids' education as their responsibility. And Universities will do whatever it takes at some point to keep kids (and tuition) flowing.
Get Off My Lawn
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Over_ed said:

doubledog said:

The university rating game is more or less subjective to the raters. TAMU rarely breaks the top 10 (overall) due to its relatively weak liberal arts program (thus the recent merging of liberal arts and sciences at TAMU) and the impact it has on the rating game. As proof: TAMU consistently ranks in the top 10 in sciences, agriculture and engineering.

Yep. And I admit I have a bias (business, engineering/tech/stat) degrees.

But, at this point is a strong Liberal Arts program an asset for a University? My answer is no.
User name fits… potentially? Depends on whether you're over educated, over education, over Edward, or over erectile disorder. Congrats, regardless, I guess!
Logos Stick
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So liberal ******ation has failed again?! Say it ain't so!
agsalaska
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AG
Over_ed said:

K2-HMFIC said:

https://substack.com/@noahpinion/note/p-179897140?r=1q05vy&utm_medium=ios&utm_source=notes-share-action

Noah Smith just wrote a piece on this as well.


Quote:

The basic story is that the education reform movement spearheaded by George W. Bush, which focused on improving test scores, collapsed in the mid-2010s. After that, public schools across the country began to lower their standards passing kids who didn't know the material, making their curricula a lot easier, etc. Often, kids just skip class entirely in Oregon, around a third of all schoolchildren are chronically absent from school.

This was sometimes done in the name of "equity" even though the new lax policies lead to widening racial and gender gaps. The rise of phones in schools probably exacerbated the trend, as did the pandemic, but the fundamental cause is lax standards everywhere.



Good friend, pretty senior prof at one of the local Community Colleges. She was planning to work another 5 years, now looking to quit next year. She can't in good conscience pass as many as her administration demands.

Realize this sounds like "Old Man Yelling at Sky" but this is becoming an unsolvable problem. The dudes in San Diego can reinstitute SAT, but that will be a temporary patch.

Too many parents just don't see their kids' education as their responsibility. And Universities will do whatever it takes at some point to keep kids (and tuition) flowing.


This is about 90% on the parents.
doubledog
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Over_ed said:

Good friend, pretty senior prof at one of the local Community Colleges. She was planning to work another 5 years, now looking to quit next year. She can't in good conscience pass as many as her administration demands.

Realize this sounds like "Old Man Yelling at Sky" but this is becoming an unsolvable problem. The dudes in San Diego can reinstitute SAT, but that will be a temporary patch.

Too many parents just don't see their kids' education as their responsibility. And Universities will do whatever it takes at some point to keep kids (and tuition) flowing.

Some community colleges have an upside down bell curve when it comes to grades. You have students (at least in Bryan) that are very smart and they take Blinn classes because it saves them $$$ when they transfer the credits and then you have those that could not get into TAMU/t.u (etc) due to poor grades (HS). There are very few "average" students, at least at Blinn in Bryan and so grading on a curve is challenging at best.
MouthBQ98
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Grade inflation is destroying the credibility of the university degree credential rapidly, in all degree programs that don't have far line plicit Pat graduate requirements for competency, I.e. standardized testing for progression to advanced degrees or a rigorous certification process post graduation to gain employment.

You can't fake being competent very long as an engineer going for a PE or a med student trying to get through bummed school.

With most degree plans, you can BS your way all the way through to a doctorate or post graduate employment rising the wave of mutual promotion amongst peers with equally useless educations.
ts5641
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Has there ever been a great indicator we're plowing full steam ahead toward Idiocracy? An "elite" university has a chunk of students who can't do middle school math. Unreal.
Logos Stick
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Over_ed said:

K2-HMFIC said:

https://substack.com/@noahpinion/note/p-179897140?r=1q05vy&utm_medium=ios&utm_source=notes-share-action

Noah Smith just wrote a piece on this as well.


Quote:

The basic story is that the education reform movement spearheaded by George W. Bush, which focused on improving test scores, collapsed in the mid-2010s. After that, public schools across the country began to lower their standards passing kids who didn't know the material, making their curricula a lot easier, etc. Often, kids just skip class entirely in Oregon, around a third of all schoolchildren are chronically absent from school.

This was sometimes done in the name of "equity" even though the new lax policies lead to widening racial and gender gaps. The rise of phones in schools probably exacerbated the trend, as did the pandemic, but the fundamental cause is lax standards everywhere.



Good friend, pretty senior prof at one of the local Community Colleges. She was planning to work another 5 years, now looking to quit next year. She can't in good conscience pass as many as her administration demands.

Realize this sounds like "Old Man Yelling at Sky" but this is becoming an unsolvable problem. The dudes in San Diego can reinstitute SAT, but that will be a temporary patch.

Too many parents just don't see their kids' education as their responsibility. And Universities will do whatever it takes at some point to keep kids (and tuition) flowing.



And there was already massive grade inflation going on before the last decade of woke.

"From 1990-2020, GPAs at public and non-profit universities rose over 16%. The rate has been ~0.14 points per decade over 50 years, accelerating post-2000.

The share of A's has ballooned, making it the most common grade nationwide (replacing B's by the mid-1990s)."
ts5641
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K2-HMFIC said:

https://substack.com/@noahpinion/note/p-179897140?r=1q05vy&utm_medium=ios&utm_source=notes-share-action

Noah Smith just wrote a piece on this as well.


Quote:

The basic story is that the education reform movement spearheaded by George W. Bush, which focused on improving test scores, collapsed in the mid-2010s. After that, public schools across the country began to lower their standards passing kids who didn't know the material, making their curricula a lot easier, etc. Often, kids just skip class entirely in Oregon, around a third of all schoolchildren are chronically absent from school.

This was sometimes done in the name of "equity" even though the new lax policies lead to widening racial and gender gaps. The rise of phones in schools probably exacerbated the trend, as did the pandemic, but the fundamental cause is lax standards everywhere.



Good lord the left has screwed public education up! It may be unrecoverable at this point.
Serotonin
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Steve Sailer has written a lot about this, including two years ago as the changes were being implemented. Here is a recent piece:
https://www.stevesailer.net/p/uc-san-diego-shoots-itself-in-the

He also linked to this excellent summary of the situation:
Quote:

This UCSD math proficiency scandal reminds me of the great financial crisis in 2008. There was an assumption then, that bundled mortgages are nearly risk-free investments. This led to banks being incentivized to underwrite more mortgages, so they started handing out "NINJA" loans (No Income, No Job / Assets). This radical shift in the distribution of who got loans caused the initial assumption to break.

It's similar here: there's a base assumption that a UC diploma leads to better salaries, so the more we give to lower-income folks, we lift more young people out of poverty and that's a good thing. But if you start handing these diplomas out to larger numbers of students who can't do elementary school math, employers will notice and the base assumption will break.


AGinHI
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I'm concerned when I'm my parents age (80's) that doctors are going to be arrogant dolts and as I'm closing out the chapter on mortality and things are just breaking down, despite my personal efforts, the only people I will have to deal with for medical help will be white supremacy indoctrinated morons.
MaxPower
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doubledog said:

The university rating game is more or less subjective to the raters. TAMU rarely breaks the top 10 (overall) due to its relatively weak liberal arts program (thus the recent merging of liberal arts and sciences at TAMU) and the impact it has on the rating game. As proof: TAMU consistently ranks in the top 10 in sciences, agriculture, buisness and engineering.
The only thing that should matter is how many of their graduates get jobs and how much do they get paid. Everything else is bull*****
Sid Farkas
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doubledog said:

Over_ed said:

doubledog said:

The university rating game is more or less subjective to the raters. TAMU rarely breaks the top 10 (overall) due to its relatively weak liberal arts program (thus the recent merging of liberal arts and sciences at TAMU) and the impact it has on the rating game. As proof: TAMU consistently ranks in the top 10 in sciences, agriculture and engineering.

Yep. And I admit I have a bias (business, engineering/tech/stat) degrees.

But, at this point is a strong Liberal Arts program an asset for a University? My answer is no.

This is why ranking universities is a "game". Most rankers are media professionals (liberal arts). Two other ranking factor that weighs against TAMU and t.u. is their student/faculty ratio and their "reputation". The "reputation" factor is very subjective and is very much part of the game.

Wall Street Journal has us 1st in Texas and #28 overall...




Quote:

Our ranking measures how well each college sets graduates up for financial success. We look at how much a school improves students' chances of graduating and their future earnings, balancing these outcomes with feedback from students on college life. We don't measure reputation, nor the college's own finances.
Public schools are prominent among those that climbed the ranking this year, with two in the top 10the University of California, Berkeley at No. 8 and the Georgia Institute of Technology at No. 9and six in the top 20. No public school was in the top 10 last year and only two were in the top 20.
Schools with strong tech or business programs also fared well, including No. 2 Babson College and No. 3 Stanford University. Stanford is one of 17 California colleges in the top 50, up from six last year and by the far the most for any state.


rocky the dog
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AG
Elections are when people find out what politicians stand for, and politicians find out what people will fall for.
YouBet
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AGinHI said:

I'm concerned when I'm my parents age (80's) that doctors are going to be arrogant dolts and as I'm closing out the chapter on mortality and things are just breaking down, despite my personal efforts, the only people I will have to deal with for medical help will be white supremacy indoctrinated morons.


Call me racist but I already do this. I seek out only white doctors if at all possible and I only do that because DEI has eroded my confidence in the profession. I'm just not willing to gamble on my health.

That also doesn't mean all white doctors are competent. It's playing the odds.
Over_ed
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Get Off My Lawn said:

Over_ed said:

doubledog said:

The university rating game is more or less subjective to the raters. TAMU rarely breaks the top 10 (overall) due to its relatively weak liberal arts program (thus the recent merging of liberal arts and sciences at TAMU) and the impact it has on the rating game. As proof: TAMU consistently ranks in the top 10 in sciences, agriculture and engineering.

Yep. And I admit I have a bias (business, engineering/tech/stat) degrees.

But, at this point is a strong Liberal Arts program an asset for a University? My answer is no.

User name fits… potentially? Depends on whether you're over educated, over education, over Edward, or over erectile disorder. Congrats, regardless, I guess!

To be clear, the stat was ABD - never did the book report. We all have hobbies.

: -) And let's watch that ED talk; I ain't getting any younger but all is fine so far and my last PSA (last week) was 2.1. Funny as you get older some tests become a lot more important.
El Gallo Blanco
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Man UCSD and SDSU would be fun @ss schools to go to. That town is amazing...and surprisingly friendly.
El Gallo Blanco
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ts5641 said:

Has there ever been a great indicator we're plowing full steam ahead toward Idiocracy? An "elite" university has a chunk of students who can't do middle school math. Unreal.

A lot of these universities are straight up admitting kids that in the past would have flipped burgers or worked construction and maybe gone to community college on the side, at best. Remember when you'd see young people working fast food and blue collared jobs?

It's a gigantic unethical money grab, and an unsustainable one that is bad for society.
YouBet
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AG
Fun article on grade inflation at Harvard which has been written about before. They are infamous for it.

https://www.wsj.com/opinion/how-do-you-spell-harvard-with-an-endless-supply-of-as-5d358cf4?st=yttR83&reflink=article_copyURL_share

Quote:

A recent internal Harvard report found that more than 60% of grades given to undergraduates in the 2024-25 academic year were A'sup from about 25% two decades ago. The median grade-point average at graduation, which was 3.29 in 1985, is now 3.83. Since 2016 the median GPA at Harvard has been an A, even though the number of hours that students say they spend studying has remained relatively unchanged for close to 20 years.


This is why Harvard is a joke and I would never hire a student with a Harvard degree:

Quote:

Predictably, Harvard students were none too pleased with these findings. One person described the report as "soul-crushing," according to the Harvard Crimson. Another argued that stricter academic standards would be a threat to students' mental health. Others insisted that grading was already too harsh. "I can't reach my maximum level of enjoyment just learning the material because I'm so anxious about the midterm, so anxious about the papers, and because I know it's so harshly graded," one freshman explained. "If that standard is raised even more, it's unrealistic to assume that people will enjoy their classes."


But Yale looks to be worse and other schools just as bad:

Quote:

A 2023 report from Yale found that nearly 80% of grades given to its undergraduates were A's or A-minuses. Lighter grading standards during the pandemic didn't help matters, but the trend predates Covid and isn't confined to our prestige institutions. According to the National Center for Education Statistics, between 1990 and 2020, the median college GPA rose by 21.5%. The largest increase (17%) came at public four-year institutions, not Ivy League schools.


DEI ruins everything and this reinforces my earlier comment on doctors.

Quote:

The dilution of standards is no less a concern in graduate schools, where worry about racial and ethnic balance in outcomes has become more important than competency. Step 1 of the three-part licensure exam given to medical students to measure their basic grasp of anatomy, biology and other science used to be graded using a numerical score. In 2019 the medical groups who oversee the exam voted to change the grading of Step 1 to pass/fail.

"The solution to the fact that white students score better on the exam was to eliminate reporting scores," wrote Stanley Goldfarb, a former associate dean of curriculum at the University of Pennsylvania Medical School. "This makes about as much sense as Major League Baseball eliminating batting averages to ensure that no ethnic cohort outperforms the others."
Over_ed
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Serotonin said:

Steve Sailer has written a lot about this, including two years ago as the changes were being implemented. Here is a recent piece:
https://www.stevesailer.net/p/uc-san-diego-shoots-itself-in-the

He also linked to this excellent summary of the situation:
Quote:

This UCSD math proficiency scandal reminds me of the great financial crisis in 2008. There was an assumption then, that bundled mortgages are nearly risk-free investments. This led to banks being incentivized to underwrite more mortgages, so they started handing out "NINJA" loans (No Income, No Job / Assets). This radical shift in the distribution of who got loans caused the initial assumption to break.

It's similar here: there's a base assumption that a UC diploma leads to better salaries, so the more we give to lower-income folks, we lift more young people out of poverty and that's a good thing. But if you start handing these diplomas out to larger numbers of students who can't do elementary school math, employers will notice and the base assumption will break.




Great link.

Liberal drive for equal outcomes, administrators' drive for more students - esp. as more males are avoiding college, the degeneration of learning during COVID, tuition prices, now AI doing most of the "students' work" - I just don't see higher education having as much relevance going forward. The headwinds have turned into a hurricane.
aggiehawg
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AG
Over reliance on calculators. When I was in HS, never could use calculators in any math class, ever.
EX TEXASEX
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Today I am identifying as an oppressed minority. Liberals have consistently shown that when speaking to minorities, it is very important; in fact, you have to dumb down the vocabulary and concepts down to an 8th-grade level. So, would you quit being adisgusting racist conservative and dumb it down for me??!!
#FJB
Ciboag96
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China's TikTok has been a master class of strategic cultural destabilization

A teenager posts themselves dancing a routine in her room and gets 100,000 "likes" and 30,000 "followers". Brilliant attack on young dopamine receptors.

In China, the propaganda to teens is all about productivity and personal improvement.

Someone will write a book about the success of this master strategy one day, and I bet it will be Chinese.
El Gallo Blanco
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aggiehawg said:

Over reliance on calculators. When I was in HS, never could use calculators in any math class, ever.


To be fair, on the entire timeline of mankind, only for a very short blip could the common high schooler or college student do advanced math with no calculator. Basically, only the boomers and Gen X, and maybe a sliver of the prior and following generations

I do think learning math serves an important role in exercising the brain and improving cognitive function. And that advanced calculators should be introduced ideally at the advanced levels, after the student has mastered most of the math themselves…but almost no one uses anything more than very basic algebra in the real world if we're being honest. Aside from certain special fields like engineering, physics etc.
Anubus
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Over_ed said:

US News and World Report ranks UC San Diego as the 6th best public university - ahead of A&M and t.u. TBH, I want to laugh when the top schools are all liberal cesspools where the average grade is an "A", but that is for another post.

In any case, those conservative (Fascist is really more appropriate) Faculty at UCSD are upset because students can't do math. Like 900 incoming freshmen cannot do math at the MIDDLE SCHOOL level. 900 is about 1/8th of the freshman class

  • Only 87% of incoming freshmen could do a first-grade math problem.
  • Only 19% could solve an 8th grade fractions problem.
This is a school where many students have AP calculus credits.
Nope, it's not a story from the Bee.

So anyway, these reactionary, Faculty opposers of all things fair and right, are talking about bringing back the SAT test and setting minimum cut-offs. They got rid of the SAT because it unfairly disadvantaged the "usual" groups. And I suspect they see the writing on the wall - things aren't going to get better with students using AI.

I am very glad that such a thing can't happen at Texas flagship institutions like A&M and t.u.

Admitting students based purely on HS grades would be really stupid, wouldn't it?

the full faculty report: https://senate.ucsd.edu/media/740347/sawg-report-on-admissions-review-docs.pdf


Are the students coming from Marlin, TX?
Maroon Dawn
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AG
Standards have collapsed in the name of "just pass them all and get rid of them"

We were floored when my niece told us at her school there's no penalty for not doing homework and that you can just keep retaking a test until you get a C and even then everyone gets passed to the next grade unless a parent actively asks for you to be held back
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