US colleges game out a possible end to race-conscious student admissions
Send a link to a friend
[May 24, 2023]
By Gabriella Borter
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - In 1998, the year a voter-approved measure
barring the use of race-conscious admissions policies for public
colleges and universities in California took effect, the percentage of
Black, Hispanic and Native American students admitted at two of the
state's elite public schools plummeted by more than 50%.
Those figures for UCLA and the University of California, Berkeley offer
a cautionary tale as administrators at schools around the United States
await a Supreme Court decision due by the end of June that is expected
to prohibit affirmative action student admissions policies nationwide.
That potential outcome in cases involving Harvard University and the
University of North Carolina has brought new urgency to efforts by
schools to maintain or increase racial and ethnic diversity in their
student populations, according to interviews with senior administrators
at a dozen colleges and universities.
"We cannot afford as a nation to regress on our goals to create an
educated and equitable society," said Seth Allen, head of admissions at
Pomona College in California. "So it's incumbent on higher education to
figure out how to work collectively together to ensure that we're not
furthering the enrollment gap among different groups of students."
Many selective U.S. colleges and universities for decades have used some
form of affirmative action to boost enrollment of minority students,
seeing value in having a diverse student population not only to offer
educational opportunity but to bring a range of perspectives onto
campuses.
Affirmative action refers to policies that favor people belonging to
certain groups considered disadvantaged or subject to discrimination, in
areas such as hiring and student admissions.
Schools are exploring numerous options. Administrators said they are
drafting strategies to expand their recruitment of diverse applicants,
remove application barriers and increase the rate of minority students
who accept their admissions offers.
An official at Rice University in Houston said the school will lean on
student essay responses to ensure it admits students from diverse
backgrounds. The U.S. Air Force Academy will focus on recruiting more
students from diverse congressional districts.
The president of Skidmore College in New York said connecting with high
school counselors will become "more important than ever" to broaden the
school's applicant pool.
Many schools said they already have waived fees, made standardized
testing optional and are looking to improve financial aid offers - steps
that could help boost minority enrollment.
All of the administrators said their plans could change to comply with
the scope of the Supreme Court's reasoning in the Harvard and UNC cases.
Some acknowledged that whatever steps schools take to circumvent a ban
on race-conscious admissions policies might face legal challenges of
their own.
"We're likely to see a whole new generation of lawsuits arise from the
new admission standards that will be adopted by colleges and
universities," said Danielle Holley, current dean of Howard University
School of Law in Washington and incoming president of Mount Holyoke
College in Massachusetts.
Lawsuits backed by an anti-affirmative action activist accused Harvard
and UNC of unlawful discrimination in student admissions either by
violating the U.S. Constitution's promise of equal protection under the
law or a federal law barring discrimination based on race and other
factors.
[to top of second column]
|
Members of the University of North
Carolina?s diverse student body mingle and make their way across
campus as the Supreme Court weighs the issue of race-conscious
admissions to colleges, in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, U.S., March
28, 2023. REUTERS/Jonathan Drake/File Photo
UNC was accused of discriminating against white and Asian American
applicants. Harvard was accused of bias against Asian American
applicants. The schools denied these allegations.
GOING LOCAL
Many of the school administrators said they plan to focus resources
on recruitment, a part of the admissions cycle they do not expect
the court will restrict.
Admissions officers said they were broadening their outreach to high
schools and community-based organizations in neighborhoods with
lower incomes and educational attainment - places often populated by
racial minorities.
Yvonne Berumen, vice president of admissions at Pitzer College in
California, said her team might run essay workshops at high schools
in those targeted zip codes - postal regions - in hopes of
generating applications.
Chris George, dean of admissions at St. Olaf College in Minnesota,
said high school data from national organizations like the College
Board, which offers information on neighborhood income and housing
stability, will help guide which high schools the college sends
representatives to visit and the recruitment events they attend.
Community-based organizations that identify local students who show
academic promise and help them apply to college will be crucial
partners for identifying and recruiting potential applicants from
diverse backgrounds, the administrators said.
"They become extensions of our recruiting and admissions team in
many ways, and we're seeing each year a bigger and bigger percentage
of our students come from those community-based organizations," said
Kent Devereaux, president of Goucher College in Maryland.
Administrators at schools located in or near major cities, including
Pomona College near Los Angeles and Sarah Lawrence College in New
York, said they would hope to draw more students from racially
diverse local high schools and take more transfer students from
local community colleges.
Colonel Arthur Primas Jr., the U.S. Air Force Academy's admissions
director, said his racially diverse recruiting team will continue to
visit schools in U.S. congressional districts with heavy
concentrations of minorities and will try to encourage more students
to seek nominations to the academy from their local members of
Congress.
"The Air Force Academy has had a long tradition of actively
recruiting diverse candidates," Primas said. "But we're going to
have to really be expansive."
(Reporting by Gabriella Borter; Additional reporting by Donna
Bryson; Editing by Will Dunham and Colleen Jenkins)
[© 2023 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |