What if the college admissions system that's supposed to find the "best" students is actually tearing society apart? Casey explores how American universities went from simple Latin and Greek exams to today's mysterious "holistic" evaluations that nobody really understands.
On Pattern Break, we trace the wild evolution from Harvard's 1905 entrance exams to the complex system we have now. You'll discover how "character" evaluations started as a way to limit Jewish enrollment in the 1920s, learn why SAT scores alone would make Harvard's freshman class 60% Asian American (but actual enrollment is way different), and understand the scary connection between pure merit systems and sky-high suicide rates in countries like South Korea. Casey breaks down how good intentions created a system that might be doing more harm than good.
š Chapters:
[00:00] Introduction with Casey
[01:45] Harvard's simple 1905 admission requirements
[04:15] The 1920s shift to "character" evaluations
[07:30] SAT scores vs. actual enrollment numbers
[09:45] International merit systems and their dark side
[11:30] Why this matters for society today
š Topics: college admissions, merit-based testing, holistic evaluations, Harvard admissions, education history, SAT scores
ā Think your friends need to hear this? Follow Pattern Break and leave us a 5-star rating - it really helps other curious people find us. New episodes drop daily, so we'll catch you tomorrow with another story that'll make you see the world differently!
Catch every episode at Pattern Break
---------------
Keywords: cultural patterns, history podcast, historical cycles, social psychology, social dynamics
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices