l********o 发帖数: 5629 | 1 【 以下文字转载自 Military 讨论区 】
发信人: liyuanchao (李源潮), 信区: Military
标 题: 藤校从40年代开始就不招死读书的了
发信站: BBS 未名空间站 (Sun Nov 17 01:19:26 2013, 美东)
Harvard’s provost Paul Buck declared in the late 1940s that Harvard should
reject the “sensitive, neurotic” type and the “intellectually over-
stimulated” in favor of boys of the “healthy extrovert kind.” In 1950,
Yale’s president, Alfred Whitney Griswold, declared that the ideal Yalie
was not a “beetle-browed, highly specialized intellectual, but a well-
rounded man.” Another dean told Whyte that “in screening applications from
secondary schools he felt it was only common sense to take into account not
only what the college wanted, but what, four years later, corporations’
recruiters would want. ‘They like a pretty gregarious, active type,’ he
said. ‘So we find that the best man is the one who’s had an 80 or 85
average in school and plenty of extracurricular activity. We see little use
for the “brilliant” introvert.’ ” | t*******r 发帖数: 22634 | 2 Paul Buck 是不是历史系的? 隶属文科 Liberal Arts?
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【在 l********o 的大作中提到】 : 【 以下文字转载自 Military 讨论区 】 : 发信人: liyuanchao (李源潮), 信区: Military : 标 题: 藤校从40年代开始就不招死读书的了 : 发信站: BBS 未名空间站 (Sun Nov 17 01:19:26 2013, 美东) : Harvard’s provost Paul Buck declared in the late 1940s that Harvard should : reject the “sensitive, neurotic” type and the “intellectually over- : stimulated” in favor of boys of the “healthy extrovert kind.” In 1950, : Yale’s president, Alfred Whitney Griswold, declared that the ideal Yalie : was not a “beetle-browed, highly specialized intellectual, but a well- : rounded man.” Another dean told Whyte that “in screening applications from
| c*******u 发帖数: 667 | 3 有本为introverts说话的书可以看下
Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can't Stop Talking
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【在 l********o 的大作中提到】 : 【 以下文字转载自 Military 讨论区 】 : 发信人: liyuanchao (李源潮), 信区: Military : 标 题: 藤校从40年代开始就不招死读书的了 : 发信站: BBS 未名空间站 (Sun Nov 17 01:19:26 2013, 美东) : Harvard’s provost Paul Buck declared in the late 1940s that Harvard should : reject the “sensitive, neurotic” type and the “intellectually over- : stimulated” in favor of boys of the “healthy extrovert kind.” In 1950, : Yale’s president, Alfred Whitney Griswold, declared that the ideal Yalie : was not a “beetle-browed, highly specialized intellectual, but a well- : rounded man.” Another dean told Whyte that “in screening applications from
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