Friday, January 02, 2004

The Trouble Threshold

Volokh has a fascinating summary of "No Excuses: Closing the Racial Gap in Learning" by Abigail & Stephan Thernstrom. I've always pointed out that the concern with "white superiority" in academic achievement is actually quite ignorant and misses a critical point: Asian achievement outstrips white achievement by about the same amount that White achievement outstrips Black and Hispanic academic achievement! (Did you know that Asians constitute some 50% of the student body at Berkely and UCLA -- the most prestigious public institutions in California -- in spite of "swimming against" affirmative action and comprising less than 10% of California's population?)

Volokh quotes a review by Clarence Page that contains this nugget:
Among the most intriguing possible reasons for this disparity is an intriguing group difference in the way students measure their family's "trouble threshold," according to one study that the Thernstroms cite. The "trouble threshold" is the lowest grade that students think they can receive before their parents go volcanic with anger and start clamping down on TV time, etc. In the survey by Laurence Steinberg, a Temple University social scientist, published in his 1996 book, "Beyond the Classroom," most of the black and Hispanic students surveyed said they could avoid trouble at home as long as their grades stayed above C-minus.

Most of the whites, by contrast, said their parents would give them a hard time if their children came home with anything less than a B-minus.

By contrast, most of the Asian students, whether immigrant or native-born, said that their parents would be upset if they brought home anything less than an A-minus
. [Emphasis from Volokh.]
In critique of this, my wife (whose background is in education) points out that Asians have a particularly high suicide rate perhaps derived from such standards! My counter is that too much ignorance leads to an unacceptably high homocide rate.

In the end, the world is not a simple place and lots of factors matter -- not least of which include nutrition and genetics. But I believe that downplaying the role of culture is wrong-headed in the extreme...

Wednesday, December 31, 2003

A Tale of Two Earthquakes

In one word. (Hat tip LGF.)

And a Happy New Year to everyone. And that would include best wishes to everyone, everywhere. Even Jacques Chirac. Although I better quit before I have second thoughts about Osama and Kim Jong Il. Whew, that was a close one...

Monday, December 29, 2003

Totten provides a nice fisking of the man the Dems are empowering to commit suicide for them.

Hmmmmm. And then I realized the Dems have more reasons to sympathize with terrorists than I could have previously believed. Nihil-brained suicide is a common ethos for both of them!