Posted on 03/31/2019 9:47:10 PM PDT by TBP
On Monday in federal court, Harvard denied charges that it discriminates against Asian-Americans in the same way it once discriminated against Jews. Race, its lawyer insisted, was just one of many factors considered, and it could only help an applicants chances of admission, not hurt them.
On the substance, this is a dubious proposition. Students for Fair Admissions, which brought the lawsuit, has produced considerable evidence that Harvard uses various means to exclude Asian-Americans even when they are more qualified academically and have better records of extracurricular activities than other accepted students. These means include suspiciously lower ratings given Asian-Americans for personality traits such as kindness and likability.
The Harvard pretense is that it is possible to favor one race without discriminating against others. A 2009 Princeton study demonstrates otherwise. It found that an Asian-American applicant to an elite university has to score 450 points higher on the SAT to get in than a black applicant, 270 points higher than a Latino one and 140 points higher than a white one.
For all this, Harvard does have an argument here. In a footnote in its motion for summary judgment, the university says this case involves a private university, which has a weighty academic-freedom interest, protected by the First Amendment, in choosing its students, and in determining how they are educated (including through the judgment about the educational benefits following from a diverse student body). Translation: we should be free to decide whom we admit and whom we dont.
Just one teensy problem. Its called the Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and it prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, color or national origin in any program or activity that receives Federal funds or other Federal financial assistance. Harvard receives millions from the feds each year, directly through grants as well as indirectly via federal financial aid.
READ Republicans Need to Save Capitalism All of which puts two fundamental principles in conflict. The first is that people should not be discriminated against because of their race. The second is that private institutions should be left to run their own shops without the feds telling them how to do it.
Can these principles be reconciled? Tiny Hillsdale College suggests they can. Back in the 1970s the federal government demanded the Michigan-based college begin counting its students by race and sex as a condition of the federal loans some of its students received.
For an institution whose founding charter made it the first college in the nation to declare itself open to all students irrespective of nation, color, or sex, and which boasted a long and noble history of color-blind admissions, this was insulting. In 1956, for example, its undefeated football team refused an invitation to the Tangerine Bowl rather than comply with official demands that the college not field its black players.
Like Harvard, Hillsdale believes it knows best how to run its school. Unlike Harvard, it made a tough decision to stand on this principle. To avoid the regulatory strings that come with federal dollars, in 1985 Hillsdale decided to forgo all federal dollarsincluding financial aid for its students.
To put this in perspective, Hillsdale today has about 1,500 students, charges roughly $27,000 tuition for a first-rate liberal-arts education, and has a modest endowment of near $600 million. Harvards endowment clocks in at $39 billion. If little Hillsdale can give up taxpayer dollars to remain true to its principles, surely big, wealthy Harvard can.
READ Next 10 months will not be time for momentum investment: Nilesh Shah, Kotak AMC As NYU law professor Richard Epstein points out, one effect of Title VI today is to make liars out of our most elite institutions of higher learning. In an article for the Hoover Institutions Defining Ideas, Mr. Epstein says Harvard would like to argue that its interest in diversity justifies discriminating in favor of some races and against others. But it fears attacking the Civil Rights Act, and is skittish about making its case forthrightly because the opening words of Title VI state that no person should be subject to racial discrimination. Mr. Epsteins solution would be to repeal Title VI and let schools admit or exclude whomever they want.
If Harvard wants to sacrifice academic merit for diversity, let it, he says. The Asian-American students excluded would have many other choices. And the whole process would be more honest.
Of course, the likelihood that Title VI will be scrapped in our lifetimes is almost nil. Which leaves the Hillsdale option as the only practical alternative for colleges and universities that wish to stand on their own values and mission statements. If Harvard truly believes diversity trumps merit, it should say so proudlyand be willing to give up the federal dollars that are the only reason it is now forced to defend itself in federal court.
Hillsdale President Larry Arnn says hes more than ready to help. Any time anyone from Harvard would like to see how a college can maintain its autonomy and its values, he says, our door is open.
Criminal
How many black applicants break the 1000 point barrier of the SAT?
Race, its lawyer insisted, was just one of many factors considered, and it could only help an applicants chances of admission, not hurt them.
Hilarious
an Asian-American applicant to an elite university has to score 450 points higher on the SAT to get in than a black applicant, 270 points higher than a Latino one and 140 points higher than a white one.
And how much higher does a white person have to score than any other race?
Or better yet, how much lower does the score of another race, compared to white, demonstrate their inferiority?
They destroy a society to "lift up" the lesser and least deserving among us. Or they are used as a weapon to achieve a liberal objective which is nothing close to benevolent.
The unscrupulous wealthy and unprincipled lawyer class bribe and purchase slots for their children and clients, but..................skewing academic testing based upon race and ethnicity is just dandy with the system lords.
You can always tell a Hahvard grad, but ya can’t tell ‘im much!
bookmark
SAT scores by race
At the high end, a negligible percentage of blacks score math SAT of 700 or better.
The elites want servants, not competitors.
Looking at the scores the article focuses on the black white gap.
the black-Asian gap is certainly more pronounced
the white-Asian gap is breathtaking also.
So proud of my son graduating from Hillsdale this May.
Harvard doesn’t want to learn what Hillsdale can teach.
13-15%?
I found the the white/Asian gap on the LSAT scores very interesting.
I would be curious to see the white/Asian gap on the MCAT.
” Race, its lawyer insisted, was just one of many factors considered, and it could only help an applicants chances of admission, not hurt them.”
That statement actually came from a “premier” institution of higher learning. Let that roll around for a few minutes. Race can only “help” someone with admission, not hurt them.
And I keep hearing that Harvard STEM is really bad ass. Laughable on its very face. If some are helped by being a certain race, then the race of others is a detriment.
Harvard provides an invaluable (literally) certificate of entry into the ruling class. A Harvard degree is worth many tens of millions of dollars. When I am advising parents or prospective students, saying "yes" to a Harvard acceptance is almost always the right move, supposing, of course that the acceptee is prepared (and is in most cases already well along) to self-educate.
Hillsdale is selling an education. That's a different product.
Congratulations. I’m a Hillsdale alum myself.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.