Settings

Theme

America's elite colleges have an extra-time-on-tests problem

theatlantic.com

10 points by fortran77 13 days ago · 4 comments

Reader

stockresearcher 13 days ago

Ha, well this author certainly had her thesis and was looking for supporting facts. But I agree with the quoted people at the universities that think that the levels of undiagnosed anxiety and ADHD outstrips rich-people-cheating by 5:1 or so. Public K-12 has become awful in the US and is most definitely causing anxiety at high rates among students. School is nothing like when we were kids.

  • apparent 13 days ago

    > Ha, well this author certainly had her thesis and was looking for supporting facts.

    What makes you say this? Do you think she went into the assignment knowing that the rates of disability diagnosis were quite so high at Brown, Stanford, Amherst, etc.? Or do you think she might have gone in with an open mind, learned the facts, and then formed the thesis of the article?

fortran77OP 13 days ago

https://archive.ph/zXBZ4

apparent 13 days ago

TLDR: at Stanford, 38% of undergrads are registered as having a disability. At Brown and Harvard, it's over 20%. At Amherst, it's 34%. Although not all of these students receive testing accommodations, researchers say most do.

Keyboard Shortcuts

j
Next item
k
Previous item
o / Enter
Open selected item
?
Show this help
Esc
Close modal / clear selection