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by estiaan
830 days ago
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I was reading the example of UC Berkely appearing to have gender bias in the admissions and read the following: “it showed that women tended to apply to more competitive departments with lower rates of admission, even among qualified applicants (such as in the English department), whereas men tended to apply to less competitive departments with higher rates of admission (such as in the engineering department)” That’s the opposite of what I would expect, I’d expect that English and the arts in general would be a lot easier to get into than stem, that’s how it is in Australia Edit: When I say get into I mean get into university, not getting into the industry |
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The data is for application to graduate programs. There is a ton more funding for engineering, and many/most students going for a PhD in engineering don't pay for it. There's very little funding in the humanities, and most students are not willing to pay high costs for a PhD in the humanities, so the department tightly restricts admission.
As a result, it's easier to get into an engineering PhD program - as long as you are competent enough.
I had a friend who was a fellow engineering student. He became disillusioned and wanted to go into journalism. He applied to transfer to the Communications program at the university and told me how competitive it was - they admit less than 10 people per year. He did not get in.
[1] Obvious if you've spent a lot of time in grad school.