Mirroring the Powerful They Often Cover, Major Newspapers Dominated by Graduates of Elite Schools, Study Finds
September 20, 2020 | News | No Comments
A recent study offers data to support the commonly-held notion that the news media are staffed largely by Americans from “elite” educational backgrounds—likely placing serious limits on the perspective top news outlets are able to offer about the nation and people on which they are tasked with reporting.
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Researchers from Psychology Today and the Autism and Developmental Medicine Institute analyzed the universities and colleges attended by nearly 2,000 employees of the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal, finding that significant portions of the staff attended one of 29 schools classified as elite.
The schools, including Harvard, MIT, Yale, Princeton, and Stanford, had the highest median SAT scores in the country—but many factors keep students with high levels of cognitive ability from achieving high scores on SAT’s, and out of the nation’s most selective schools.
“There are cognitively elite students at many schools; they just cluster in numbers in the ones we identified obviously,” Kaja Perina, one of the study’s authors, told The Intercept. “The fact is the combination of social networks plus high ability tends to get these people out of the Ivy Leagues and into these top papers with much more frequency.”
According to the study, about 44 percent of Times employees attended “elite” schools, while nearly 50 percent of those at the Journal went to one of the 29 top colleges.
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