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Barnes, Malerie Beth; Moses, Michele S. – Educational Policy, 2021
Despite the marginal success that anti-affirmative action groups have had at paring back the use of race in college admissions practices, affirmative action has remained largely in-tact as a tool to promote diversity on college campuses. But what might happen if "diversity"--the very thing that heretofore has protected affirmative…
Descriptors: Affirmative Action, Misconceptions, College Admission, Politics of Education
James G. Martin Center for Academic Renewal, 2021
Today, colleges and universities use overt admissions preferences to create student bodies that reflect the ethnic, racial, or gender demographics of the population--at the expense of academic merit and preparedness. While the original aim of the policy was to end discrimination and promote fairness, it has led to unequal treatment on the basis of…
Descriptors: College Admission, Admission Criteria, Equal Education, Preferences
Donald Wittman – Educational Measurement: Issues and Practice, 2024
I study student characteristics and academic performance at the University of California, where consideration of an applicant's ethnicity has been banned since 1996 and SAT scores were used in admitting students to the university until fall 2021. I show the following: (1) SAT scores were more important than high school grades in predicting…
Descriptors: College Entrance Examinations, Admission Criteria, Grade Point Average, Disproportionate Representation
Bryan J. Cook – Urban Institute, 2023
There is an abundance of research on the college admissions process and the practices selective schools employ to evaluate and select students. Most findings are complex, nuanced, or conflicting. Less than a month after the Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS) ruled in "Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard" and "Students…
Descriptors: College Admission, Higher Education, Affirmative Action, Access to Education
Lowinger, Robert Jay; Kornbluh, Mariah; Hartlep, Nicholas Daniel; Luong, Alexandra; An, Mihyang; LePeau, Lucy Anne – Journal of Student Affairs Research and Practice, 2021
Using a sample of 119 Hmong students, this study employed multiple linear regression analysis to examine the role of ethnic identity, principled policy beliefs, self-interest, and gender in Hmong college students' support for college affirmative action policies designed to benefit their own group. Results indicated principled policy beliefs as…
Descriptors: Hmong People, Asian American Students, Ethnicity, Beliefs
Gabriel Montague – Education Trust, 2023
This report analyzes access through the lens of enrollment for Black residents who are between the ages of 18-24. At The Education Trust, it is believed enrollment is just one component of higher education access, and that retention, completion, and student outcomes should be considered as well. While nearly 74% of the institutions in the sample…
Descriptors: Disproportionate Representation, African American Students, Undergraduate Students, Private Colleges
Parsons, Carl – Whiteness and Education, 2022
Racisms are plural, taking different forms in different countries, subject to change in focus and intensity over time. Colonialism and slavery influence attitudes and policies in both countries through to modern times. In examining the British and American contexts, one needs to particularise by (a) country, (b) ethnicities, (c) histories, (d)…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Comparative Education, Racism, Educational Practices
Iyer, Padmini; Rolleston, Caine; Huong, Vu Thi Thanh – Comparative Education Review, 2021
Vietnam has achieved near-universal access to compulsory schooling over the past two decades. However, inequalities between ethnic majority and minority students are stark at post-compulsory levels, where progression is selective based on academic criteria and ability to pay. In this article, we adopt a mixed-methods approach to examine quality…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Equal Education, Educational Quality, Ethnic Groups
The False Notion of "Race-Neutrality": How Legal Battles in Higher Education Undermine Racial Equity
Garces, Liliana M. – Change: The Magazine of Higher Learning, 2020
Affirmative action in postsecondary admissions may be the most visible area where the battles over the consideration of race in educational policy and practice have played out in the law. After decades of sustained legal attacks on the efforts of universities to implement policies that disrupt racial inequalities, many in the higher education…
Descriptors: Racial Bias, Educational Legislation, Higher Education, Equal Education
Nielsen, Kelly; Hamilton, Laura T. – Change: The Magazine of Higher Learning, 2022
According to the authors of "Higher Education for American Democracy," the role of education in a democratic society "is not merely to meet the demands of the present" but to "serve as an instrument of social transition" (p. 6). A democratic university should be a living model of democracy that could embody the civic…
Descriptors: Democracy, Higher Education, Reports, Educational History
Timothy L. Fields; Shereem Herndon-Brown – Johns Hopkins University Press, 2024
Finding the right college is a challenge for all students, but Black families face additional challenges and questions when navigating the admissions process. Veteran admissions experts Timothy L. Fields and Shereem Herndon-Brown demystify this complexity by advising families on when to begin the process, where to apply, and how to be a…
Descriptors: College Admission, African American Students, College Applicants, Black Colleges
James-Gallaway, Chaddrick D.; James-Gallaway, ArCasia D. – Professional Educator, 2022
This conceptual paper analyzes persistent challenges to racially diversify higher education in Texas, paying special attention to trends at this Southern state's most selective flagship--University of Texas at Austin. We apply critical race theorist Kimberlè Crenshaw's frame of race liberalism and her view of equality as either expansive or…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Racial Discrimination, Equal Education, Minority Group Students
Wechsler, Harold S.; Diner, Steven J. – Johns Hopkins University Press, 2022
Affirmative action in college admission is one of the most contested initiatives in contemporary federal policy, from its beginnings in the 1960s through the 2014 lawsuit alleging that Harvard discriminates against Asian American applicants. Supporters point out that using race and ethnicity as a criterion for admission helps remediate some of the…
Descriptors: Educational History, Access to Education, Higher Education, Affirmative Action
Dobson, Ashley – Journal of College Admission, 2018
Bias--both perceived and real--dictates how Asian-Americans view the college admission process. "The Harvard case" is a lawsuit brought by Students for Fair Admissions Inc. (SFFA). The group, led by conservative legal strategist Edward Blum, sued Harvard in 2014, claiming there was evidence proving bias against Asian-American students in…
Descriptors: Asian American Students, Diversity, Racial Bias, Racial Identification
Kotzee, Ben – Philosophical Inquiry in Education, 2018
In this paper, I investigate two clashing perspectives regarding the good of the university: a socioeconomic and an epistemic perspective. I position current writing on the university in the philosophy of education as being largely socio-economic and contrast this view to an earlier tradition of writing about the university that I position as…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Higher Education, Educational Philosophy, College Role