| ▲ | vasilipupkin an hour ago | |||||||
1 in 4 is 25% it's on their website. Along with all the other details. where is 38% coming from that is a better source than Stanford's own website. At a minumum the article should have said where they got that number and why it disagrees with Stanford's own number. And again, it includes every possible kind of accommodation under the sun. Which is totally fine and not an issue of any kind. | ||||||||
| ▲ | Aloisius 35 minutes ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
The Atlantic journalist talked to Stanford Professor Paul Graham Fisher who was co-chair of the university’s disability task force, so I imagine they either got it from him or someone else at the school. They could have made it up, but since the article is a couple days old and no one has printed any retraction or correction, I'm more inclined to believe the number is accurate. | ||||||||
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| ▲ | Aurornis 26 minutes ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
> 1 in 4 is 25% N in M fractions are used in casual copy to convey an approximate value. Finding a "1 in 4" number on a dated website does not mean that the current number is literally 25%. It's an approximation and not meant to be taken as a precise value. They're not going to update the website to "26 out of 100" if the number changes. Citing an old, approximate number in some non-specific website copy does not invalidate anything. | ||||||||
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