Who are these people?
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I’m guessing some kind of academic achievement.
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The new cast for the reboot of White Men Can’t Jump?
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The new Captcha.. You have to click on all the white men to prove you aren’t a robot? My bet is it’s the two blond broads next to the Asian guy…
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You spoiled it. I was going to say the people who have known CrashTest, in the biblical sense.
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You spoiled it. I was going to say the people who have known CrashTest, in the biblical sense.
@Doctor-Phibes Nah. More than nine wimmenz.
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@Doctor-Phibes Nah. More than nine wimmenz.
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@Copper said in Who are these people?:
USC Medical Center residents class of 2023
Surgical interns.
What are the odds that, of all the medical students applying to the surgical program at Stanford, 12 out of the 13 top ones were women?
@George-K said in Who are these people?:
@Copper said in Who are these people?:
USC Medical Center residents class of 2023
Surgical interns.
What are the odds that, of all the medical students applying to the surgical program at Stanford, 12 out of the 13 top ones were women?
What does “top” mean in this case?
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@George-K said in Who are these people?:
@Copper said in Who are these people?:
USC Medical Center residents class of 2023
Surgical interns.
What are the odds that, of all the medical students applying to the surgical program at Stanford, 12 out of the 13 top ones were women?
What does “top” mean in this case?
@Axtremus the way the residents' "match" works is that students rate their preferred schools in order. Similarly, schools rank their applicants in order of preference.
So, a student that ranks Stanford #1, but is #15 in Stanford's ranking will not "match," assuming there are only 13 spots available. That student will then "match" with his next highest ranking school that has listed xer high enough.
Given that Stanford
iswas a prestigious institution, I would assume that many students rank it high in their picks. Presumably 49% of these studentsare malehave a Y chromosome, based on statistics.So, I find it unusual, yeah, unusual that only 1 person with a Y chromosome is in the top 13 of Stanford's picks. Either a lot of Y chromosome carriers ranked Stanford low in their list (unlikely), or Stanford preferred those applicants with a matched set of XX chromosomes.
(I'm trying to be as gender affirming as possible here).
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@Axtremus the way the residents' "match" works is that students rate their preferred schools in order. Similarly, schools rank their applicants in order of preference.
So, a student that ranks Stanford #1, but is #15 in Stanford's ranking will not "match," assuming there are only 13 spots available. That student will then "match" with his next highest ranking school that has listed xer high enough.
Given that Stanford
iswas a prestigious institution, I would assume that many students rank it high in their picks. Presumably 49% of these studentsare malehave a Y chromosome, based on statistics.So, I find it unusual, yeah, unusual that only 1 person with a Y chromosome is in the top 13 of Stanford's picks. Either a lot of Y chromosome carriers ranked Stanford low in their list (unlikely), or Stanford preferred those applicants with a matched set of XX chromosomes.
(I'm trying to be as gender affirming as possible here).
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Stanford undergrad doesn't like white people very much either.
https://facts.stanford.edu/academics/undergraduate-profile/