Opportunity is not even: a classmate prepared for classes by studying the material in the summer. Some classmates took SAT classes. On the flip side, a classmate had trouble studying because he had no quiet place to study at home.
In my college, at least differences in opportunity were somewhat recognized resulting in release of all old tests instead of it being hoarded by HKN, a quiet place to study for everyone, and financial aid so that a student wouldn’t have to take basically a full time job to pay for school.
We need to ensure opportunity all along the educational path. The current US system is blindingly obviously tilted.
And when I turn in a bad year of work because my two sisters-in-law and their eight children have moved into my home, should my performance review reflect that, or should it be normed for my circumstances?
Here is exactly what I said: We need to ensure opportunity all along the educational path. The current US system is blindingly obviously tilted.
Furthermore examples of equality of opportunity were having equal access to previous tests, equal access to quiet study areas, and financial aid so that students didn’t have to take on full time jobs to afford college.
None of these included norming test scores or norming job performance measures.
> Scores should be normalized by income, stability of household, then holistic factors such as extraneous circumstances, health, etc.
Did you want to refer to hypothetical admission scores? There used to be US colleges that admitted on a points system (and some very low-prestige ones still do), but they've stopped doing that since giving objective points based on race was ruled illegal for public schools.
In my college, at least differences in opportunity were somewhat recognized resulting in release of all old tests instead of it being hoarded by HKN, a quiet place to study for everyone, and financial aid so that a student wouldn’t have to take basically a full time job to pay for school.
We need to ensure opportunity all along the educational path. The current US system is blindingly obviously tilted.