Before I attended and graduated from an ivy, I attended a CUNY school for a year. I remember speaking to a classmate in my calc I class who explained to me that he was taking a full course load on top a 20 hour a week job at a local department store. All while commuting from the depths of Queens.
Life is just much harder for lower income students. They have less bandwidth, across every dimension, than many of the students I studied with Columbia, some of whom stayed in apartments purchased by their parents and enjoyed very comfortable allowances. (There are actually many lower income students at Columbia, just to clarify, and despite some assistance from the school I’ve heard more than a few tales of students being unable to feed themselves).
It's true, but also has corollaries across different groups than just low income. I remember working with a university who was trying to tailor programs to military veterans. One of the things that came as a shock to them is that many veterans used their GI Bill money to cover necessities like rent and utilities (usually in addition to working). Since many were non-traditional, moving home during an off-semester wasn't an option, so they had to be enrolled full-time, year around (including summer semesters). Since the GI Bill only covered 36 months of school and the course offerings were limited in many semesters, it caused many veterans to burn through their benefits before finishing a degree. The goal was to develop a curriculum that would allow veterans to finish a degree attending year-around, but I don't think anything ever came of it. I head (but don't know) that things are better under the current GI Bill iteration.
I am not a fan of categorical statements; doubly so if those can be easily disproved. There are benefits to joining military beyond 'perk' you described.
That said, I would like you to consider existence of two populations that refute your statement:
- surge of recruits immediately following 9/11
- military families
If you say nobody, you may want to consider qualifying that statement somewhat.
Firstly, I wasn't making that claim. Secondly, that claim is easily falsifiable. The majority of the American military actual comes from middle-class households.
"Most members of the military come from middle-class neighborhoods. The middle three quintiles for household income were overrepresented among enlisted recruits"[1]
When you look at the educational attainment of those recruits, it erodes your claim. Just talk to some of them and you'll see there's virtually as many reasons for joining as there are recruits. The idea that there is one path for the college-bound (e.g., attending straight out of high school) is probably a contributor to some of the problems we see in college.
That was pretty much my experience. Immigrant family and since I went to high school in Europe, I did not have much of a choice for university and ended up at CUNY. Worked evening in supermarkets for the first couple of years, then I was able to get an internship due to my grades, but basically installing computers, not development. There were not many internships available. Eventually went to a top engineering uni for grad school. Despite all of this, I am still considered privileged and white. When you have no circle, no network, no money, when no one in your family went to college, everything is more difficult.
> I am still considered privileged and white. When you have no circle, no network, no money, when no one in your family went to college, everything is more difficult.
Now imagine being a Black person with no circle, no network, no money, no one in your family having gone to college. Everything identical for your skin color. Statistically, the hypothetical black person is likely to have worse outcomes than the hypothetical equivalent white person. This is what white privilege is.
It is possible that you benefitted from white privilege, despite all of the hardships you faced.
You can pretend all day that white privilege doesn't exist, but that's just not what is observed.
<< You can pretend all day that white privilege doesn't exist, but that's just not what is observed.
Here is an alternate way of looking at this. An immigrant from Kenya comes to US with nothing and little to no support system and succeeds despite things stacked against him. A local black person that should have turf advantage can't compete with an immigrant, who is actually hungry to get ahead.
What do you want me to do? Cripple the immigrant so that the local black person can have a leg up?
Are you sure is about white privilege? Are you sure it is not about something more systemic?
We can pretend. We can even have a real conversation.
But white privilege is an actual social construct ( ie. made up bs ).
You can pretend all you want that white people dont receive preferential treatment, but neither research nor the historical record show evidence for that belief.
Allow me to rephrase, because this whole thing is getting silly.
Everyone is different. Everyone is treated differently. It is only because we have society that we managed to have some level of enforced playing field going.
There is no need to pretend. You can succeed while having deck stacked against you. Naturally, you can also play the victim card.
I honestly do not care. I am done with this conversation. Cuz you know. White privilege and all.
>You can succeed while having deck stacked against you.
I agree! It's also less likely when the deck is stacked against you. If only there were a phrase that conveyed the idea that some people have a bunch of factors out of their control, i dunno say a deck of cards, were like shuffled or maybe stacked in a seemingly random way that broke against them. Of course, theres no cliche like rhat, because that kind of thing doesn't happen. Ever. Not once in science or history.
I think what you may find in many of these discussions is that people understand privilege may exist across many domains, but that it's an error to think those privileges can be distilled down to just a single domain. We can do better to acknowledge all these different domains, but it's not like there's a single "privilege index" to rank people.
> it's an error to think those privileges can be distilled down to just a single domain
Youre right, we are all hugely multifaceted individuals. It is hard and maybe even weird to try to isolate the notion of privilege down to a single domain, but often, this is what science is trying to do: control all but one variable and try to observe and measure an effect.
Yes, science does that to measure the effect of one variable. This isn’t to be confused with assuming the entire global effect is caused by one variable.
We can, for example, try to measure the effect of one carcinogen to cancer risk. We can’t say all cancer is attributable to one carcinogen.
To relate it to the topic at hand, you would have to measure to total variation of privilege attributable to race as compared to other factors like nationality, socioeconomic status, hell even height, weight, and physical attractiveness. In other words, it’s an incredibly complex model that shouldn’t be reduced to a single variable to estimate effectively.
we can say, ceteris paribus, p(successful outcome|white) > p(successful outcome|nonwhite). That's what I am claiming. It also is possible to say that p(successful outcome|nonwhite) > 0. In fact, both of these things can be true simultaneously.
Right, but aren't we after the joint probability if we're really talking about equity? I.e., we can't make strong claims about an outcome unless we factor in the joint probability across all dimensions.
So, to extend your example, we can't necessarily say p(successful outcome|white)*p(successful outcome|poor) > p(successful outcome|nonwhite)*p(successful outcome|wealthy) until we measure those other socioeconomic conditions. It gets more complicated when we consider they may not all be independent of one another.
And that's just one extra variable. As you say, most agree we are multifaceted individuals. Adding dimensions like p(successful outcome|disability) or p(successful outcome|female) further complicates this as do all the other variables of a social species. So we can't really make strong statements about outcomes of a system very well unless we measure across the entire system of variables. I think that's what people are poking at. We may be able to make conclusions about individual variables but that doesn't always translate to an accurate model of the system at large. It's interesting and perhaps useful, but certainly incomplete. It only works under a "ceteris paribus" assumption, which is to say: "it only works in contrived circumstances that don't reflect reality."
How is this a surprise to anyone? Wouldn’t you be more surprised if this weren’t the case? Imagine rich students not realizing they didn’t have to work 20 hrs/week.
These are all life choices. I’ve seen many un-optimal college decisions.
Going to college out of state.
Taking out too many loans.
Studying something with poor ROI.
Not going to community college.
Looking at what others have instead of concentrating on your own situation.
Not realizing the game isn’t over with graduation, you still have to hustle hard core.
Funny how even poor immigrants tend to rise above these obstacles very frequently. It’s largely a mindset issue.
I think the point is that some of these are not life choices for some people. A wealthy student may have the choice to work or not, while a low-income student may not.
If we value meritocracy, we also need to value opportunity. This means not creating a system that is arbitrarily that erodes that opportunity. The top whatever-percent of a society will always find a way to succeed, but I tend to think we want a society that doesn't make it very hard for a large swath to make a middle-class living. Even then, I'm not sure creating a society that forces the masses to "hustle hard core" to manage a middle-class life is a good tack.
I tend to agree with you on some aspects though. There's a mindset and life choices that impact the outcome. I generally say there is a path to middle-class for anyone if you 1) avoid substance abuse, 2) avoid having children before financially ready, and 3) avoid large amounts of debt on depreciating assets. Unfortunately, we've created a system that breaks rule #3 for a lot of people. Some would also argue #2 is getting harder, given the amount training required to become financially stable in a modern economy.
> These are all life choices. I’ve seen many un-optimal college decisions.
This is all hidden curriculum stuff (just like knowing that applying to 200 places is not what will get you an internship), that you know when you're upper middle class / know people in the field but not as someone who's not in the know.
> Critics say the typical recruitment process at high-profile tech firms often gives an advantage to students at top computing colleges
Isn't that exactly what makes them top computing colleges? This seems like the least surprising feedback loop ever.
If Google prefers to hire interns from Stanford than from Pasadena City College, is anyone really surprised? If you were in Google's shoes, wouldn't you do the same?
I think we need to look at the populations of these colleges not as solid blocks, but as distributions.
In the simplest case, we could plot the population based on objective talent vs. financial access.
And it's likely that with Stanford, you'll find some people with both high objective talent and medium financial access, and others with medium objective talent but high financial access. Even the scholarship recipients are going to need the freedom to ship off to college and pay for incidental expenses, rather than remain at home to support their families.
On the flip side, at less prestigious colleges, it might be true that in the aggregate the objective talent level is a bit lower, but there are going to be some students with objectively high talent who simply lack the financial access to a place like Stanford, even if scholarships were on the table.
From a recruiting standpoint, is it easier for a company like Google to just ignore students from those less prestigious colleges? Yes. But will it create a bias toward people with more wealth and privilege, and undermine the goal of diversity initiatives? Also yes.
Yes, they are a lot better than most. Like a lot a lot. They do have some ole boys and gals around, but they also have a lot of extremely hard working extremely talented young people.
This does not mean that there are not hardworking talented people elsewhere. They will make it too. But the density of talent at a place like MIT, compared to most other places on Earth in general, is unprecedented, and if that rubs you the wrong way, so be it.
I have. They're not any better than many other schools out there... The graduates are not any better either when it comes to actually working either. I am not blown away by any ideas from anyone who has a degree from UCB, Stanford, MIT, etc.
I don't subscribe to mysticism around some unimaginable quality of graduates from the top-20 universities, but I bet if you picked one person from each of the top 20 schools and one person from each of the schools ranked 181-200 (from any earnestly attempted ranking source), and worked with them for a month, by looking only at their work product, you could tell which group was which far, far more often than chance.
I think the same is true for 1-20 vs 21-40, but it wouldn't be quite as clear-cut.
Top universities being top is not some kind of mass hysteria.
I used to think like this, but as someone who went to an okay college and later on competed with people from top schools, this meme is untrue and counter-productive. The top colleges have many more opportunities, including a much wider variety of courses taught as well as access to the best researchers in a field.
Well they are better as long as they attract better students. This is the most important factor when trying compare educational institutions from the perspective of a potential employer. Actual curriculum is secondary (as well.. it should be to be fair).
> Well they are better as long as they attract better students.
Which is debatable, given the prevalence of legacy admissions.
Of course, universities with an established name would also attract the best and brightest. That doesn't mean they produce the best and brightest, though.
It’s not debatable. Those who attract the best students will be considered top, of course provided they have the resources to give the students.
What’s legacy admissions got to do with it? If 30% of students are legacy and 60% are the best in the world, the 60% will carry the school. You can say the same about affirmative action.
Nobody believes colleges produce the best from nothing. They produce good results by starting on third base (great students) and letting them run as fast as they can. Some of those will become the best. That’s how it works.
> We are talking about school rankings, not professional researcher rankings
That's how university rankings work. This is widely known stuff.
If you think that Stanford is up there because they have brilliant students, you are objectively wrong. In fact, there is no standardized way of comparing students of two different institutions other than research work and citations, which makes them, again, part of the academic body.
There are literally standardized tests used in admissions. Looking at the averages of those standardized test scores of Stanford students vs other schools will tell a story about the student body that does not come as a surprise to most of us.
"Stanford is committed to a holistic review of all candidates. We consider the vast array of information provided in and with each student’s application, whether that information includes test scores or not. Students may continue to self-report test scores in their application if they would like. Applications without test scores will not be at a disadvantage." [0]
This paints a very different story.
Also, the fact that there is a percentage reserved for legacy admissions, invalidates your point completely.
Do you think that Stanford's legacy admission policy makes their student body indistinguishable from that of Pasadena City College? Or that no standardized scoring system would reveal any population-wide differences in academic ability between a school which admits 1 of 25 applicants from another that admits 25 of 25 applicants? Hell, admissions rate alone is probably enough to tell a pretty good part of the story.
They are. I have been to top and non-top. The difference was massive.
We’re there great students at the non-top? Absolutely. At the top one though, every other student was just hard core. It was incredibly competitive and the talent was off the chart.
One of my (dual ivy) co-workers (dual state school) always liked to point out that we both ended up at the same place, doing the same job, to playfully troll me. Your point is spot on.
Yale, Columbia, Community College and a State school here. I've also taught college courses at an extension school of a public university.
The population differences are real. They're like normal distributions where the mean of one is perhaps a whole SD higher than the mean of another. That said, if you pick the top 5 students at the State School and the top 5 at the Ivy, the students themselves are roughly equivalent, but the ones from the Ivy had a lot more access to higher quality facilities, funding, opportunity, faculty, and peers.
Oh,I wasnt suggesting that the end results were similar, merely that the students themselves were: hardworking, very smart, determined,efficient. The results themselves are different precisely because of the greater access afforded to kids at the ivies. The result suggests thay top students anywhere are still top students.
Basically, participants do a 2- or 3-week sprint during an academic break, and then companies have the option to bring them on for a full summer internship.
Why is this important for representation?
> All the research shows that the single largest predictor of a student landing a job within six months of graduating is whether they had a paid tech internship.
But what challenges were underrepresented students facing?
> What it boiled down to is that all those things are the result of the “privilege of free time,” when you’re not working one or more jobs as you go through college to support yourself, sometimes to support your family. In essence, the companies were looking for things on résumés that were more attributes of privilege than they were of potential.
BREAKING NEWS: being poor is harder than not being poor. Full story at 11. </sarcasm>
Yes, we need to do better as a culture at scouting out high potential that wasn't raised with the advantage of having mentors who know how to build a career. But there's this implicit assumption that the companies offering these jobs and internships have endless resources to spend on talent scouting.
Schools and local community organizations that exist for these people need to step up their efforts to actually learn what's current and build these bridges: pipeline programs, guest speakers, hosting their own hackathons, career/interview prep courses, etc. Everyone is expecting the tail to wag the dog.
> [An applicant prepared] for an interview with Amazon, he said, by spending the better part of two weeks writing down episodes from his life that matched the company’s guiding values, known internally as leadership principles.
Does Amazon actually test for these "leadership principles" [0] for undergrad internships?
I wouldn't be surprised Amazon did have questions along those lines for its internships, but I don't get how you could spend 2 weeks on solely this portion of the interview prep unless you were procrastinating hellaciously.
I've gone through the full-job interview with Amazon recently (right as they were laying off thousands, so weird timing) so I can relate my experience.
They want you to have stories prepared for each of the principles. That's 16 anecdotes you have to prepare. They all have to follow a certain format as well: the STAR method. Situation/Task, Action, Result. You have to describe the situation and tell how it relates to the principle, what you specifically did and how it reflects the principle, and finally the results of your action.
Each anecdote needs to be about 5 to 10 minutes long. So you have to prepare roughly two hours of material total. I can see it taking two weeks.
Also some people need more practice and memorization than others. And some people are way more apt to shit talk their former coworkers, while others realize that you can frame any negative as a challenge for the future.
If you're reserving 10 hours a week to set up distinct dog-and-pony shows for, say, 10 companies, that's 1 hour per company per week, so in this case it's 2 hours to write down about 16 "leadership principles," so 7 1⁄2 minutes per principle. That's not a lot of time per se, though it's certainly wasted if you ask me.
This is what bugs me sometimes about today’s interns. It seems everybody wants to do “leadership” and is less interested in doing actual work. I guess it makes sense because the modern workplace usually rewards administrators more than people who do the work. But it’s a bad trend in my view. Too many bullshit jobs and too little doers.
Yes, just about every interview will have 1-2 star style interview questions looking for an example of one of the leadership principles. In a tech interview that might be 7-20 minutes of an hour. The non tech portions will focus on the lps more. These questions are a great way to do focused experience questions.
It's definitely harder for really junior people to have lots of examples here than someone with 5 years but I scale my expectations way down for interns. But having any experience helps. I'll take examples from anywhere. I actually find the sheltered rich kids are worse at this. Some of them can literally only list their student projects when I ask for a disagree and commit example. But if you worked retail like target or Wendy's you'll have many examples. One of my mentees put themselves through college working the alumni guilt we donations line. We got solid examples across the board in a few hours.
I do also find going and finding these examples also helps you for other job interviews as they're just your interesting experience points
Those sheltered kids spent their whole lives Disagreeing and Committing to their schooling and arts/athletics training regimen. They just didn't see it in that light.
Those would be good examples if they had them. And many do. There's many opportunities to show individual response to situations through highschool, on sports, etc. Run the bake sale, organize tshirts, etc. I just want folks who have taken ANY initiative in their lives really at the intern level. Or had ANY real world experience. Where they've come up with an idea, talked to people about it, tried it and seen the results.
But in general the expectation I have for experience that a intern will have is pretty low. Basically if they have one relevant experience they're at average. If they've done anything else they're going to ace that section.
Less experience... I'll lean more into the code. Generally take it really easy on interns as it is their first real job.
Now for the LP questions on people with 3/5/10/15 years of experience, I've had folks with 10 years of experience with literally no examples of disagree and commit. I had one who was apparently a professional yes person. They straight up told me they would be uncomfortable bringing up any issues to their bosses with any of their boss's ideas. I ended the interview early.
I was offered an Solution Architect internship at AWS after my 3rd year at uni which involed some online assessments and two interviews.
The OAs consisted of a technical quizzes and a weird "work simulator" where you had to apply the leadership principles. The interviews had a similar setup where one was focused on technical questions/experiences while the other was with a manager where I had to relate my experiences to the leadership principles.
My interview prep really only took an hour or two. They sent over some tips regarding the STAR method and leadership principles, etc. I have no idea what this person was doing for two weeks.
It did hurt to turn them down in the end as the pay + housing stipend was really good, and I would have liked to have a FAANG on the resume. However, I had already accepted an offer from a smaller company and preferred a SDE role in a potentially less stressful work environment.
Interviewed for an internship at Amazon years ago and there was a multiple choice questionairre about Amazon leadership principles/values and that was about it. The rest of the online interview was Leetcode questions.
Imo the bigger issue is that at non-target schools there isn't any mentorship or advice on what to study and why, which leads to a negative reinforcement cycle of kids at non-targets not getting an alumni network at good programs.
Every tech conference of a reasonable size I've been to has had special events for diversity demographics. Most BigCos have recruiting resources targeted at historically black colleges, despite being unwarranted by the colleges' academic performance - in fact the article mentions them! If you're a white or asian male candidate from a second string college you are of course out of luck unless you have some other signaling mechanism.
I find this unsurprising. But I think the problem is upstream.
Getting into a top-tier CS program has gotten incredibly competitive, and college has gotten incredibly expensive. At Illinois (where I teach), the university admits 40% of its applicants. Our CS program admits 7%, and a demographic profile that bears no relationship to the broader university population. Relevant to this article, far more out-of-state students, and therefore students from wealthier backgrounds. (Because our out-of-state tuition is insane.)
So if lower-income students can't get internships, it's probably because it's hard for them to get into a decent CS program in the first place.
And from where I sit, the situation is even more frustrating, because we have thousands of data points showing that students drawn from the general university population can and do succeed in our CS courses—at least those required for the minor, which has become increasingly popular. But a lot of CS departments have felt increasingly besieged over the past few decades, as we've been swamped with students and frequently not been provided with appropriate resources. (Although there's also plenty of programs out there insisting on doing things that don't scale well, which exacerbates the problem.) So increasingly the "answer" is to clamp down on admissions, in ways that usually disproportionately affect certain populations.
We have a lot of ongoing BPC and DEI efforts in my department. But there's very little if any focus on admissions. I asked recently, and apparently we don't even know the demographic breakdown of our applicant pool.
Regardless of what aspects of diversity you care about, one of the biggest sources of inequity in CS today is in university admissions.
> So if lower-income students can't get internships, it's probably because it's hard for them to get into a decent CS program in the first place.
Sure. But every big tech company has relationships with universities, and has billions of dollars to invest, and would easily recover in the form of talent if they invested in education, even before the undergraduate level. I've worked at small consulting firms that were able to provide a few scholarships on much smaller budgets.
You're right to hold academia responsible as well, but a big reason that systemic problems like this aren't fixed is that the responsibility for fixing them is spread out across a lot of different groups. This lets any individual group point the finger at another group not doing their part in fixing the problem and use that as an excuse for not doing their part in fixing the problem. People are doing that all over this thread.
Kudos to you for doing your part and acknowledging university admissions as part of the problem, but I'd be less eager to hold big tech blameless.
<< He had chosen to attend an affordable local public university, not a top computing school, and he did not know anyone in the industry who could put in a good word for him with tech recruiters.
I am not in tech-tech, but in my volunteer work I had a kid, who could likely do well in our paid internship program ( and it is not a bad place to work at ). I encouraged him to apply, but I have heard nothing since. In a week, I forget about it altogether, but it is always a shame to let a mind go to waste.
But this brings me to the real part of this post. Lower income students have all sorts of disadvantages to overcome. Big tech internships can be hard to get to anyone. What is the argument of this article here? Add parity? Racial quota? If it is a problem, but it is a demand problem, because it is as THE thing to get.
I don't know. I just don't understand the point of this article at all.
> But this brings me to the real part of this post. Lower income students have all sorts of disadvantages to overcome. Big tech internships can be hard to get to anyone. What is the argument of this article here? Add parity? Racial quota? If it is a problem, but it is a demand problem, because it is as THE thing to get.
It's fairly obvious we need to fix our recruiting process for internships: engineers generally don't give a fuck about which school you went to (unlike say, in consulting), but recruiters do, and they'll filter out anyone who didn't go to a target school, it's a real issue.
Parent income may be correlated but it is not an input.
As someone who grew up poor, big tech was my best way of building wealth. I didn’t need connections, didn’t need to work unpaid internships. I just had to get an interview and pass it.
I didn’t go to a prestigious school for CS so I had a zig zaggy path through the defense industry before ending up in big tech. Yes, it’s true that you simply don’t get the same opportunities as someone who went to a reputed CS school and honestly I can’t blame the companies: as an interviewer, people with good schools on their resume tend to succeed a lot more at the interviews.
That said, if I went to a better school I’m not sure I would have had the chance to study CS in the first place. At places like the University of Washington for example it is extremely competitive to get in to the CS major - I know that I definitely did not have the grades to be competitive as a freshman. So, at my not so great school that lets everyone in, I had the opportunity to learn something I was genuinely interested in and eventually (with a bit of luck) turn that into a zig zag path into a job at a big tech co.
The way I see it, tech companies should keep whatever bar they have. Interviews suck but they’re a great opportunity equalizer (yes, people from prestigious schools fail these too). People from low income backgrounds can and absolutely do make it in big tech, and I’ve known many capable colleagues without degrees.
> longstanding inequities in Silicon Valley recruitment and hiring
Maybe for intern postions or higher positions, but for regular software developer positions "longstanding inequities" is just not true. From my observation 80% of SWEs are immigrants, we graduated schools nobody heard of in the US. For interview purpose it didn't matter. For all the hate (rightfully) have for leetcode interviews, it doesn't care about your background.
It sucks, but what can you do? Wealthy peers do have their advantages, but that's the case in almost every field out there. This is not unique to tech.
The #1 thing I would do if you're doing unpaid internships, is get rid of unpaid internships, which should be illegal anyway. Unpaid internships mean that you will only get candidates who come from high-income backgrounds, because low-income candidates can't afford to work for free for any significant amount of time.
I also won't give money to nonprofits that use unpaid internships. If you won't help the people in your own house, that tells me you aren't fundamentally invested in helping people, and I'd argue that remains true no matter what the mission of your organization is.
"Big tech" internships are almost always paid, so the good news here is that they're well ahead of you.
With that said, the answer of hire lower-income candidates isn't particularly actionable if I'm a manager bringing on interns. What am I supposed to do, ask them if they're income-challenged and hire them if they say yes?
The story is tragic, painful, and heartbreaking to read. My heart and empathy go out to these struggling and ambitious people. Yet none of those make this an easy problem to solve.
> With that said, the answer of hire lower-income candidates isn't particularly actionable if I'm a manager bringing on interns. What am I supposed to do, ask them if they're income-challenged and hire them if they say yes?
Yes.
Obviously that's not the only question you ask them: you still want to hire someone with the ability to perform the job.
> Yet none of those make this an easy problem to solve.
Big tech is well known for only being interested in solving easy problems, which are the only problems worth solving. /s
I'm not a lawyer so I don't know what laws might apply here. Can you explain what you're talking about?
As far as I can tell, high-income people aren't a protected class anywhere in the US. There are many state laws preventing you from asking salary histories[1], but that's not everywhere, and where such laws exist, companies are already using loopholes to discriminate against low-income candidates. Many of these laws only say that you aren't allowed to use income history to determine pay: you're welcome to filter candidates by income history if your pay is stated up front.
Even under the most strict conditions, you could specify that certain positions are intended as an aid program for lower-income applicants (as defined by an income range) and it would take a special kind of douchebag to apply for such a position if they weren't low-income, even without you verifying their income. This strikes me as possibly the best solution anyway, because sometimes income doesn't tell the whole story: someone with prior high income might have massive medical debt, for example which decreases their effective income.
Given the tight association between income and race, I think it would almost inevitably look exactly like a clear racial preference of the sort that's illegal under common anti-discrimination language. This is the kind of thing that lands companies in court. Even if they win, it's a huge blow to PR and expensive.
Obviously you are allowed to look at income history in some manner, but a lot of the people concerned here won't have any significant income history. So what you're really doing is filtering by the economic status of a student's family. That's inevitably going to be fraught.
> you could specify that certain positions are intended as an aid program for lower-income applicants (as defined by an income range) and it would take a special kind of douchebag to apply for such a position if they weren't low-income, even without you verifying their income
If you're looking at telling what feels like a little white lie to get a big boost to the next five to seven decades of your life, how easy is it going to be for you to pass on the chance? You personally are clearly willing to take the hit for the greater cause of justice, but I do not have faith that millions of people each year who know they are competing for a limited number of opportunities will share the strength of your conviction.
Ultimately, I think we're in a tough spot. At scale, there are enough people suffering that it's easy to find and tell stories about how bad it is for them. Yet solving these major hardships experienced by real people is far harder than tugging on heartstrings.
> Given the tight association between income and race, I think it would almost inevitably look exactly like a clear racial preference of the sort that's illegal under common anti-discrimination language. This is the kind of thing that lands companies in court. Even if they win, it's a huge blow to PR and expensive.
Given the number of companies that blatantly use income to discriminate against underprivileged races and suffer zero consequences, I think your concern here is unfounded.
> If you're looking at telling what feels like a little white lie to get a big boost to the next five to seven decades of your life, how easy is it going to be for you to pass on the chance? You personally are clearly willing to take the hit for the greater cause of justice, but I do not have faith that millions of people each year who know they are competing for a limited number of opportunities will share the strength of your conviction.
That's not a "little white lie", and having a moral compass that you're willing to follow over money isn't some sort of abnormal thing.
Your opinion fits with a general anti-pattern in aid programs where people spend more money trying to verify eligibility for aid than they would spend letting a few outliers game the system, meanwhile excluding people who are legitimately eligible because the verification process presents barriers.
While I'm not willing to accuse you of either of these things, I will say that this view often comes from people who assume everyone is as amoral as they are, or who are actively trying to undermine the aid programs so they can defund them.
Ultimately your opinion makes no sense. You're worried that some of the candidates might lie and you'd hire high-income candidates when you meant to hire low-income candidates. So you just throw up your hands, and say nothing can be done, and then hire high-income candidates because that's what happens when you make no effort to do otherwise. You literally don't even have to spend more money to try to hire lower-income candidates. It begins to sound like you're just not interested in solving the problem.
> Ultimately, I think we're in a tough spot. At scale, there are enough people suffering that it's easy to find and tell stories about how bad it is for them. Yet solving these major hardships experienced by real people is far harder than tugging on heartstrings.
I'm not tugging on heartstrings. Nowhere have I mentioned any of the hardships which low-income people experience. I'm literally proposing solutions which you're shooting down with incredulity and this straw man argument.
If there's money to be made, Hacker News is all about solving hard problems. But suddenly when it involves taking some responsibility for a social problem, it's hard and that's it!
The subject of the article are internships which pay very well. Big tech internships are usually between $45-50/hr. Some people I know make more money at internships than their entire annual PhD stipend.
YCombinator is a startup incubator, so ostensibly a lot of people here aren't in big tech, and startups do often use unpaid interns. Programmers might not have the full impression of this, because programming internships are usually paid in my experience, even at small startups. But lots of internships in (for example) marketing or administration/HR are unpaid.
Well, the stipend is traditionally shit, but the graduate programs like to remind you about the generous tuition waiver. STEM students are so lucky. I have no idea how humanities students justify their situation to themselves.
yeah it's not like we don't know the majority root causes for most of society ills. being poor just perpetuates throughout every other part of a persons life in really nasty feedback loops. criminal justice, health, income, opportunities for advancement, etc.
Wait, if you can't argue logically or decently, just say so. It is understandable to get angry when confronted with logic.
> Believe it or not, both you and the New York Times can both be doing the wrong thing.
I am not the king of Tech.
Here let me spell it out in an easy-to-digest manner:
If in other privileged industries rate of hiring poor folks is lower than that of tech, tech is actually doing good and not wrong. Is that clear?
You assume tech is in the wrong automatically without rationally analyzing it. The way to rationally analyze it is to compare with other rich industries.
Once again, we should stop moral aggrandizing and argue scientifically.
Who tf knows? Have they published an article on it?
> Are you saying it’s an issue across all industries? Or?
I am not saying anything about that. All I am saying is this:
For a fair and logical/scientific comparison, the article should have included other rich and powerful industries that folks want to work in, but I guess NYT doesn't believe in fairness.
It is always important to maintain some amount of self-awareness. Applying to 200 internships and not getting a single response should signal something in your brain. I'm not saying some form of discrimination is not at play, but at some point you have to be realistic. It seems in the same vein as people being postdocs for 20 years while waiting for a instructor position to open up. Crying foul isn't going to help. That doesn't mean it's not worth writing articles like this one, but I don't think it's going to change much. As long as there is some notion of "prestige" it's going to attract far more people than there are seats, and someone has to get turned away. Meritocracy is a pipe dream.
I wonder how the job market would look like if looking at education was no longer legal (of course, you could look at the existence of a degree or credential, but not where it was conferred from).
My guess: first, it would be swamped with candidates from fly-by-night institutions granting degrees that would make the University of Phoenix look like Harvard.
This would lead to a call for for gatekeeping of degree-granting institutions, only we'd call it accreditation rather than gatekeeping.
Once that cycle completed, you'd find that among the many candidates who all had BS in Computer Science from some unspecified (but accredited) universities, some of them came with an additional verifiable credential that they had earned the prestigious "Leland Stanford Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Computing", while others had verifiably won the "William Barton Rogers Award for Excellence in Engineering and Physical Sciences" each granted to the several hundred of the top students each year...
Have people not been saying for years that BigTech is like a finishing school for the elites?
You finish your fancy degree, get a job at a name-brand BigTech, pay your dues for a few years, then leave as part of a founding team (or the founder) of a VC-backed startup. At worst, you go be an exec at a later stage startup thanks to the wonderful connections you’ve built in BigTech.
I love how tech claims to love diversity among it's employees but then they snatch up the Asian, White, African American, etc, students who also just so happen to be all be wealthy and go to the best CS schools.
> the Asian, White, African American, etc, students who also just so happen to be all be wealthy
In other words: the wealthy students
The racialization here is so silly. Your suspiciously included categories account for the overwhelming majority of the US population. Also, as we all know, completeness would have required listing every single race.
That's exactly the point: big tech's silly tokenization/racialization only provides superficial diversity. They almost exclusively hire people of means.
I liked the story about the girl from the Colorado School of Mines because I went to New Mexico Tech and they were our rivals. We were successful in the early 1990s of changing their "M" to read "NMT" but when they tried to do the same with us they found that our "M" is inside a weapons testing reservation. (I really saw an M-1 tank parked by the road in there once.)
There was an old sci-fi movie where an astronaut said he was say he was from CSM and we'd always boo.
> We were successful in the early 1990s of changing their "M" to read "NMT" but when they tried to do the same with us they found that our "M" is inside a weapons testing reservation.
I used to work at a large prestigious tech company in Silicon Valley that makes very popular, widely-used software.
And despite all the talk about inclusion and fairness and how we need to hire a diverse bunch of people, each year, without fail interns--some even high school seniors--would show up on our team.
So if I'd talk to these kids, who usually had names like "Bretton Pinkerton III" it would always turn out that they were the grandchild of a board member, or the kid of some venture captialist that the CEO or CFO was working with for another company that he was on the board of, etc.
Never once did they get interns from say, East Palo Alto high school, or one of the community colleges, or College of San Mateo, or any of the schools that a poorer kid was more likely to be at. Never.
The company, desipte their "diversity officer" was actually elitist as they come.
(Oh, and these rich kid interns rarely had any interest in what they were doing either. If they were high school, it was just resume padding and then they were off to Harvard or Stanford.)
This applies to every aspect of education and early career advancement, by design. It is ludicrous to think so-called meritocracy could sustain under capitalism. At best, we get hope and anecdotes.
Can you define what you find a reprehensible position and break it down for me? I see nothing so far that is outside the bounds of average conversations with people I know.
edit:
<< And you wonder why people don't like you.
I try to keep abreast of US 'mood' in various ways, but that jumped at me. Do you have anything to back up that statement?
What we have here is a refusal to take responsibility for their own wrong actions, instead pointing the finger at Google, incentives, feigned helplessness, everyone else doing it, and it being "the real world".
Fuck that. We can do better, and these are shite excuses for not doing better.
> I see nothing so far that is outside the bounds of average conversations with people I know.
That says a great deal about the quality of people you surround yourself with.
> I try to keep abreast of US 'mood' in various ways, but that jumped at me. Do you have anything to back up that statement?
"In 2015, a Pew poll found 71 percent of the country had a positive view on tech, and 17 a negative one. A 2019 follow-up found only 50 percent had a positive view, with 33 percent having a negative one. A Gallup poll from 2020 put positive views of tech companies at just 46 percent and found that 57 percent of US respondents wanted more regulation. In 2022, Morning Consult found 67 percent of respondents favoring regulation, and agreeing tech’s benefits did not outweigh the power the industry had accrued." - https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2023/03/silicon-valley-...
"Silicon Valley also ranked as the least certain confidence-inspirer on the list: Another 24 percent said they were “unsure” how much confidence they had in it, while 49 percent said they had “some or very little.”" - https://tech.co/news/millennials-dont-trust-silicon-valley-2...
Note that the criminal justice system did better in this poll than Silicon Valley. And the group that did the worst was "Corporate America" which just might overlap with some other folks here.
<< Fuck that. We can do better, and these are shite excuses for not doing better.
Ok. Lets say you have carte blanche to make changes. What do you propose as the priority? In other words, what would be the thing to do? I am dead serious. What is a good solution here?
<< That says a great deal about the quality of people you surround yourself with.
I deal with people as they are and not as I would like them to be. We can pretend its all sunshine and puppies, but I am not sure it is, at all, helpful to the conversation. And that includes that kid in the article. But yeah, I talk with everyone. I do my best not to enclose myself in a bubble. Now that is a recipe for an actual disaster down the line.
<< "In 2015..some or very little."
If I were to counter it, I would simply point out that you are attempting to compare apples to oranges. In other words:
"And you wonder why people don't like you." does not equal "respondents wanted more regulation".
I want more regulation ( I actively encourage it ), but the broadbrush stroke 'people don't like you' ( you being very open to interpretation so I left it in quotation marks is not exactly supported by the polls you quoted ) does not apply to me. Do you see a problem with this, lets call it, inaccurate language?
This is also before we get to the 'value' of those polls ( I was never a part of one and, frankly, don't know anyone who was.. so right of the bat, I am not entirely certain the population captured is representative of.. anything really ) and the source (MJ), which is not exactly a non-partisan player.
<< Note that the criminal justice system did better in this poll than Silicon Valley. And the group that did the worst was "Corporate America" which just might overlap with some other folks here.
I chuckled. It really made me question who had time to answer that poll, because I am sure the demographics would be a fascinating study in this case.
<< What we have here is a refusal to take responsibility for their own wrong actions, instead pointing the finger at Google, incentives, feigned helplessness, everyone else doing it, and it being "the real world".
What wrong actions? You did not offer specifics.
It is the real world. People compete with each other for scarce resources just like they did since the beginning of time. Fuck man, be happy that at least there are some rules to that competition. Are there advantages to being rich? Yeah. Is that new? No.
We are barely out of the jungle so best you can do is channel our predilections.
So I go back to my original question:
What is your solution beyond attempting to say 'tech community bad'.
edit/addendum:
What wrong actions? You did not offer specifics.
There is plenty wrong with tech today ( and if you go through my comments, you may even notice a pattern ), but I would like you to offer something beyond generic statements.
On behalf of EY and the Economic Innovation Group, Public Opinion Strategies and GBA Strategies conducted a survey of 1,200 18-34 year olds nationwide. Eight hundred and forty respondents were contacted online and 360 were contacted via cell phone. The survey was conducted June 15-20, 2016, and has a margin of error of + 2.83%.
Do you see anything there makes your analysis somewhat dated?
> Ok. Lets say you have carte blanche to make changes. What do you propose as the priority? In other words, what would be the thing to do? I am dead serious. What is a good solution here?
Gosh, I dunno, hire lower-income people?
You're acting like there's some difficult problem here when there just isn't, and I'm not going to speculate why you think there is. If you think there's something more complicated that needs to be done than putting "Internship in <X> for Low-income Applicant" in the title and describing what you mean by "Low-income" in the description, I'm all ears.
> But yeah, I talk with everyone. I do my best not to enclose myself in a bubble.
Everyone, huh? And you've never heard that people don't like Silicon Valley or corporate types? That seems extraordinarily unlikely that you're very successful in not enclosing yourself in a bubble if you've never encountered anything but uniform positivity. Gallup and Pew seem to have no trouble finding people who don't like tech, but your anecdotal experience is definitely a more representative sample.
> << "In 2015..some or very little."
> If I were to counter it, I would simply point out that you are attempting to compare apples to oranges. "And you wonder why people don't like you." does not equal "respondents wanted more regulation".
If you were to counter it, you'd have to not ignore most of it. My favorite part was where you quoted "respondents wanted more regulation", and ignored the first half of the sentence.
Maybe it's just me, but "having a negative view on tech" seems awfully like they don't like you.
> you being very open to interpretation so I left it in quotation marks is not exactly supported by the polls you quoted
"You" being the tech/corporate/startup culture which is the ostensible target audience of HN users.
> What wrong actions? You did not offer specifics.
Gee, I thought you might have read the article we were talking about before you responded.
Or do you really not see anything wrong with perpetuating income inequality by only providing opportunities to people with already-high income? Could it be that the reason you're nitpicking everything in my post is that you're actually just completely okay with inequality?
> It is the real world. People compete with each other for scarce resources just like they did since the beginning of time. Fuck man, be happy that at least there are some rules to that competition. Are there advantages to being rich? Yeah. Is that new? No.
Ah, so the only problems you're interested in solving are the new ones? Great.
> We are barely out of the jungle so best you can do is channel our predilections.
Feigned helplessness again.
> What is your solution beyond attempting to say 'tech community bad'.
What is your problem beyond attempting to say "it's absolutely impossible to hire poor people"?
> Do you see anything there makes your analysis somewhat dated?
Ah right, 2016, I'm sure all those people are dead by now.
First. I want to offer you some credit. This is a much more substantive response than I anticipated. I still think you are wrong and I will expand on why shortly, but I want to confirm that I am engaging in this conversation in good faith.
<< Gosh, I dunno, hire lower-income people?
See, this is where the problem starts, because your solution depends heavily on actual implementation and introduces its own set of problems so I list those problems in no particular order:
- Who should do that forced hiring ( forced, because if they are not doing it now, it is forced; be as specific as you can )?
- What is the lower-income treshold or is that just a euphemism ( but if it is say, please say so there is no misunderstandings )?
<< You're acting like there's some difficult problem here when there just isn't, and I'm not going to speculate why you think there is.
Are you somehow suggesting it is easy? What was your solution again? Hire everyone below certain income threshold? You don't think it qualifies as difficult?
I am sorry, but that line of thinking I can only qualify as delusional. At best.
<< Everyone, huh? And you've never heard that people don't like Silicon Valley or corporate types?
You would be surprised. You are close on the anger towards CEO-class, but you are off on tech. There is anger man. There is no denying that, but, at least right now, it seems very distributed.
<< If you were to counter it, you'd have to not ignore most of it. My favorite part was where you quoted "respondents wanted more regulation", and ignored the first half of the sentence.
I did not ignore it. I pointed out internal inconsistency and how it affects the presented argument. You chose to present that argument, badly. You want me to respond differently, present me with a better argument.
> What wrong actions? You did not offer specifics.
<< Gee, I thought you might have read the article we were talking about before you responded.
Did I misread you when you wrote the following:
<< What we have here is a refusal to take responsibility for their own wrong actions, instead pointing the finger at Google, incentives, feigned helplessness, everyone else doing it, and it being "the real world".
To me it reads like you direct me to article, but your post suggests your beef is with HN audience. That is ok, but you may want to keep your story straight. It is either article or HN response to it.
And so I repeat? What actions? I read the article. I see no issue beyond kid not getting what he wanted. It happens.
I also read HN comments. I can assure you almost any other place on the net that story would be torn to shreds across partisan lines.
Be grateful that this is still the best place to argue a point.
<< Or do you really not see anything wrong with perpetuating income inequality by only providing opportunities to people with already-high income? Could it be that the reason you're nitpicking everything in my post is that you're actually just completely okay with inequality?
See. You are assuming a whole lot with this fragment. Amusingly, you are assuming wrongly, which should give you an idea about shooting in the dark on this forum. We are all a big herd of cats and that big brush of yours I mentioned in the beginning will not make you friends or converts to your cause. Good argument might. For example, I am not above returning tax rates to WW2 levels, but that is not a conversation for today. There goes your me favoring income inequality theory.
<< Ah, so the only problems you're interested in solving are the new ones? Great.
Sarcasm is easy. Was there anything factually wrong with that statement? Resources are scarce. That is a fact. We are human. That is also a fact.
I explained the situation to you. You chose to nitpick yourself on a tangent. It is your call, but it does not advance this conversation one bit.
<< Feigned helplessness again.
Listen carefully, because here I may actually have something useful for you to hear, if you are willing to listen.
Whoever taught you those words, they are using you. Whoever gave you those talking points, they see you as a useful tool.
It is your life though. It is literally your choice.
<< What is your problem beyond attempting to say "it's absolutely impossible to hire poor people"?
How many? All of them? Some? Which some? Some exclusion criteria will exist. Someone will get sad. Your solution lacks any kind of specificity to seriously address.
Nevertheless, I will try with the limited information you did give me.
It is not impossible, but there are limits. It really is that simple. We can go over those limits if you are willing to engage, but your solution is, well, simplistic and I am being generous.
<< Ah right, 2016, I'm sure all those people are dead by now.
It was practically two presidential cycles ago. Whether they are alive or dead is irrelevant. The question is of 'sentiment'.
Are you really arguing that people's disposition does not change?
Seven year old sentiment report to me means little in a world where we forget what happened a week ago.
Life is just much harder for lower income students. They have less bandwidth, across every dimension, than many of the students I studied with Columbia, some of whom stayed in apartments purchased by their parents and enjoyed very comfortable allowances. (There are actually many lower income students at Columbia, just to clarify, and despite some assistance from the school I’ve heard more than a few tales of students being unable to feed themselves).