You're looking at Less Wrong's discussion board. This includes all posts, including those that haven't been promoted to the front page yet. For more information, see About Less Wrong.

hyporational comments on Open Thread, Jul. 13 - Jul. 19, 2015 - Less Wrong Discussion

5 Post author: MrMind 13 July 2015 06:55AM

You are viewing a comment permalink. View the original post to see all comments and the full post content.

Comments (297)

You are viewing a single comment's thread. Show more comments above.

Comment author: hyporational 15 July 2015 05:30:16PM *  0 points [-]

That deals with the costs but I doubt consent would be easy to obtain unless the schools are very uniform in quality/status and people don't have preferences about which languages to learn, hence the possible problem with ethics. Schools have preferences too, quality schools want quality students.

Comment author: ChristianKl 15 July 2015 06:14:58PM 0 points [-]

There are multiple ways you can solve the problem of who gets to go to the most desired school. You can do it via tuition fees and let money decide who goes to the best school. You can do tests to have the best students go to the best school. You can also do random assignments.

Neither of those are "better" from an ethical perspective.

Comment author: hyporational 15 July 2015 06:27:40PM *  0 points [-]

If you let money decide or do tests you lose the statistical benefits of randomization. I don't understand how you see no ethical problem in ignoring preferences or not matching best students with best schools, perhaps I misunderstand you.

Comment author: ChristianKl 15 July 2015 07:08:40PM -1 points [-]

If you let money decide or do tests you lose the statistical benefits of randomization.

Yes of course, you need the randomization.

or not matching best students with best schools

If you want an equal society that it's impotant that poor students also get good teachers.