For two decades now Shelby Steele has been arguing that
affirmative action programs in college admissions stigmatize minority
applicants. Regardless of whether they could have competed without receiving an
unfair advantage, they are assumed not to belong. The solution, Steele has
suggested, is to eliminate diversity programs and choose students merely on
merit. In that case, the number of minority class members would shrink, but
those who are there would have earned it.
Since the nation seems wedded to diversity programs, how are
we to diminish the stigma? One way is to declare that just about everyone who
enters these august institutions of higher learning has benefited from a
diversity program. Thus, legacy admissions are only admitted because of an
affirmative action program for white people. As it happens, Heather Mac Donald
has shown, legacy candidates can compete academically with their peers. Thus,
many of them would have been admitted anyway.
And now we also read about white privilege, purportedly
suggesting that white people gain an advantage merely by being white. Thus,
diversity programs level the playing field by offering minority privilege to
those who lack white privilege.
Again, no one really believes that the white students
admitted to those institutions have markedly lower SAT scores, as is the case
with minority applicants, and no one really has an explanation of why those who
enjoy the greatest white privilege seem to be Asian students.
Diversity quotas and affirmative action programs do not just
rig the system in favor of minority applicants, especially of applicants whose
test scores are hundreds of points lower than those of Asian students, but they
rig the system against white and Asian students. Since there are only a limited
number of places at these school, if you choose to render your incoming
Freshman class 15% minority, you are going to be discriminating against white
and Asian students who are significantly more qualified. Currently, Asians are
suing Harvard University on just these grounds.
So, the system is rigged in favor of minorities and against
white and Asian candidates. Now, with the cheating scam run by one
Rick Singer, the one that paid off coaches and test takers, some people who should
know better are touting the scam as an instance of white privilege. You see, we
are told, white people cheat too, white people rig the system so there is
nothing inherently unfair about allowing minorities to cheat too. It's all about erasing the stigma.
In a long, detailed, and ultimately unsatisfying article
on the college cheating scandal, Caitlin Flanagan, an excellent writer, by the
way, draws the wrong conclusion. She thinks that the world is changing, and
that white people cannot stand not having their privileges. In truth, white
people and Asians are upset at not being judged fairly and by merit. When a
minority applicant with significantly lower SAT scores is guaranteed admission
over a white applicant, the problem is not the loss of privilege but the absence
of fairness. Diversity programs discriminate on the basis of
race.
Flanagan blames it on Trump… naturally:
These
parents—many of them avowed Trump haters—are furious that what once belonged to
them has been taken away, and they are driven mad with the need to reclaim it
for their children. The changed admissions landscape at the elite colleges is
the aspect of American life that doesn’t feel right to them; it’s the lost
thing, the arcadia that disappeared so slowly they didn’t even realize it was
happening until it was gone. They can’t believe it—they truly can’t believe
it—when they realize that even the colleges they had assumed would be their
child’s back-up, emergency plan probably won’t accept them. They pay thousands
and thousands of dollars for untimed testing and private counselors; they scour
lists of board members at colleges, looking for any possible connections; they
pay for enhancing summer programs that only underscore their children’s
privilege. And—as poor whites did in the years leading up to 2016—they complain
about it endlessly. At every parent coffee, silent auction, dinner party,
Clippers game, book club, and wine tasting, someone is bitching about
admissions. And some of these parents, it turns out, haven’t just been
bitching; some of them decided to go MAGA.
They do not like seeing their children rejected from schools because they are white.
But, you will say, if you grant admissions merely on the grounds
of merit, then the schools will be disproportionately Asian. Such is the case
for New York’s elite public high schools, the ones that Comrade de Blasio is
trying to destroy by eliminating meritocratic admissions and instituting a form
of proportional representation. Advocates of the de Blasio approach have
attacked the way the schools determine merit, by giving a test. The notion of
testing for merit goes back, I recall, to the Song Dynasty in China, so it is
not a novelty.
The tests, Daniel Friedman reminds us, are identity blind:
The
multiple choice SHSAT is completely blind to identity. The test form and the
computers that grade it don’t know any tester’s race, gender, sexual
orientation or nationality. The rich and the poor must face the same
examination, and must compete on a level playing field. If there is any bias
built into the test itself, its critics have failed to identify it.
Choosing candidates on the basis of academic merit removes
any chance that wealthy parents will try to game the system.
Stuyvesant
has no development
office to exert admissions pressure on behalf of the rich and famous. There
are no legacy considerations, and no coaches to bribe. There are no Olivia
Jades or Jared
Kushners at Stuyvesant. There is also no affirmative action program at
Stuy, though de Blasio used his authority as mayor in 2018 to
force the expansion of a “discovery program” that provides a pathway
into the specialized schools for students from disadvantaged backgrounds who
missed the admissions cutoffs. Despite that program, black and Latino
enrollment remains extremely low, and Stuy, the most selective of the
specialized schools, is nearly 70 percent Asian.
As it happens, Friedman continues, the children who do the
best on the tests continue to outperform all other students throughout their
high school careers. Thus the tests are a good indication of future achievement:
The
widespread contention that Asian students only outperform other groups on the
SHSAT because they prepare unreasonably or unfairly for the test is false and
racist. The students at Stuyvesant have repeatedly proven that they’re the
highest-performing public school students in the city.
Stuy
and Bronx Science have
the highest median SAT scores in the city for graduating seniors, by a
commanding margin. Nearly 40
percent of NYC’s National Merit Semifinalists are Stuyvesant students,
which is impressive considering Stuy competes with both elite private schools
like the $51,000 per-year Dalton School and
the ultra-selective program for extremely gifted students at Hunter College
High School. Stuyvesant students are routinely among the semifinalists and
finalists in the prestigious Intel Science Competition, and in several recent
years, Stuy
had more semifinalists than any other school in the country. Stuyvesant
also frequently fields national
championship chess teams.
And also,
At
every opportunity, Stuyvesant students compete successfully against the best
students other schools have to offer, and repeatedly demonstrate themselves to
be top performers in a range of academic tasks. Yet the school’s critics
continue to claim that these students’ only distinction is their
performance on a
single meaningless test that demonstrates nothing but how much money their
parents spent on test prep.
As for the SAT, national results show that white and Asian
students consistently outperform blacks, by a significant margin. This explains why top colleges must use affirmative actions programs that
accept black students at significantly lower levels of aptitude.
A
Brookings Institution analysis of race gaps on the SAT found that only
2,200 black students nationwide scored above a 700 on the SAT’s math section,
the 97th percentile overall. By comparison, 48,000 whites and 52,200 Asians
scored above a 700. In order to make up for the shortage of black applicants
with top scores, highly-selective schools where the median white admitted
student scores at the 95th percentile will
accept black students scoring at the 85th.
The same disparity pertains in law school admissions:
On the
LSAT, the admission test for U.S. law schools, only
5 percent of black students score above 160 out of 180, which is the 80th
percentile among the overall set of test-takers. Only 29 black
students nationwide scored a 170 or higher on the LSAT in 2004,
compared to 1,900 white students. The
median LSAT score among students at Harvard and Yale is 173, and the
lowest-scoring law schools in the top 10 have median LSAT scores of 169. If
they didn’t consider race in admissions, the top U.S. law schools would admit
about the same number of black students as Stuyvesant.
The solution is not to dumb down the academy but to figure
out how to improve the performance of the underperforming children. It is certainly not to rig the system against white and Asian students.
It’s no
small task, but our culture is not up to the challenge. It would rather pretend that there is no problem. And it prefers to defame anyone who dares say otherwise.
4 comments:
Charles Murray and Richard J. Herrnstein once dared to say otherwise. Herrnstein is no longer of this world, but Charles Murray has been regularly defamed, maligned, and mobbed for almost 25 years. When he dies, Murray will be roundly maligned by all the major media outlets for two more minutes of hate. Message sent, message received. Never, ever offer a conjecture about racial disparities involving blacks that does not squarely blame white racism for their malaise.
I wish it were possible to wager on the success or failure of various identity groups in the United States. Then we would get the unvarnished truth about who has a superior and inferior set of cultural values. Don't like the Vegas odds? Fine, bet against them. I have $100 on any Asian group vs native born blacks. Betting against African born blacks is another wager altogether--and that would be a very interesting set of odds: African born blacks vs native born blacks. I'm going to dinner with my Nigerian buddy this Saturday, and I'm dying to get his take on those odds (but I already know his thoughts on that contest).
BTW, from my experience in the United States, the most explicit expressions of actual racism I have observed have been by American-born blacks toward Asians. Second would be by Mexicans toward blacks ("llantas"). Third is the treatment of light-skinned blacks by darker-skinned blacks. White racism isn't even in my top 10.
Soooo, how many white students have been admitted due to a recommendation by that BAD Orangeman?
"These parents—many of them avowed Trump haters—are furious that what once belonged to them has been taken away, and they are driven mad with the need to reclaim it for their children." Soooo, Leftie parents...
"But, you will say, if you grant admissions merely on the grounds of merit, then the schools will be disproportionately Asian." Ahhh, the "yellow peril" trope.
"Choosing candidates on the basis of academic merit removes any chance that wealthy parents will try to game the system." I wouldn't bet on that. I suspect plenty would try.
"As for the SAT, national results show that white and Asian students consistently outperform blacks, by a significant margin. This explains why top colleges must use affirmative actions programs that accept black students at significantly lower levels of aptitude." This could be due to weaker teaching in schools with blacks, student disruption of teaching there, less parental interest in black kids, or a whole list of problems that I don't know about.
Diversity is color judgments is exclusive breeds adversity. It is affirmative discrimination by the color of an individual's skin, sex, gender, etc. The solution is to ensure that children perform at home, at school, and in society, before they are left behind.
Asians work too hard.
Asian parents have high expectations.
Asian children want to please their parents.
Asians disproportionately succeed academically.
Asians are doing something very, very wrong.
Asians must be stopped.
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