Posted on 07/23/2020 9:36:57 AM PDT by Kaslin
ACT, college sports, discrimination,
A proposal recently released by The National Association of Basketball Coaches requests the NCAA remove an eligibility requirement to submit SAT or ACT scores. In the proposal, put forth by the Committee on Racial Reconciliation, the NABC decries the two tests as wicked forces of institutional racism that should be jettisoned for that reason alone. The committee was formed last month, and the proposal shows it.
Their argument runs like this: the SAT was created in 1926 by the eugenicist Carl Brigham. Brigham intended the test to demonstrate the racial superiority of white blood. His project, of course, failed.
Brigham himself admitted that the test did not measure innate ability but a composite including schooling, family background, and familiarity with English. Unsurprisingly, Brighams conclusion is rather convenient for his position. It does not admit that black students contain the capacity to succeed, nor does it admit that white students are not innately superior, only accidentally. In other words, Brigham lamented that his test was not racist enough.
The NABC, however, takes Brighams admission of failure as proof that the SAT is inherently racist. Their attempts to defend this claim are laughably simplistic:
On average, Asian American students score highest on both these tests…with whites scoring next highest…Asian American students are only a tiny 8 percent of all SAT & ACT test-takers, and likely a much smaller percentage of student-athletes. Whites constitute by far the largest group of test-takers, so overall, whites benefit the most from the SAT and ACT.
Note, first, that they could not bother to look up what percentage of student-athletes are Asian American. Presumably, this would be an important part of their argument.
Furthermore, it is worth pointing out the NABCs limited understanding of statistics. The final sentence in the above quote claims that because whites are the largest group of test-takers, whites benefit the most from the SAT and ACT. By similar reasoning, whites unconscionably benefit more from cars, social security, and public transit. Would the NABC prefer a system that allows whites to be explicitly discriminated against?
Their difficulty applying percentages continues in the very next paragraph:
There are high-scoring students from all subgroups; however, the number of high-scoring African American, Latinx, and Native American students is very small.
There are several reasons this constitutes a bad and faulty argument. First, it moves the goalposts of the argument. Predominantly, the coaches have discussed the SAT and ACT as eligibility tools, a conversation has more to do with determining the lowest acceptable score, not how many students are among the top percentiles.
Further, it fails to follow the basic rule of percentages they just used. Of course, the number of high-scoring minorities is small. A small percentage of a small percentage will quite often be a small number.
Even taking their argument in good faith, the SATs reported statistics dont indicate a test that successfully promotes white supremacy. For instance, 25 percent of Asian students who took the SAT in 2019 scored above 1400. Only 8 percent of white students scored in the same range, while 1.7 percent of the three demographics the coaches listed scored above 1400.
These statistics indicate an achievement gap, but it is worth noting that 1.7 percent is much closer to 8 percent than 8 percent is to 25 percent. Clearly, the test is not benefitting exclusively white students, as the NABC proposal claims.
Nevertheless, the NABC shouldnt be concerned about top scorers. Eligibility is concerned with the lower bound, not the upper. If the SAT is an agent of institutional racism, we should expect the SAT to prevent black students and other minorities from becoming college athletes. The statistics indicate no such barrier.
Here is where it becomes clear why the coaches didnt include demographic numbers earlier. According to statistics from the NCAA, blacks make up 21 percent of college athletes at the Division I level, despite making up only 13 percent of the US population, according to the U.S. Census. Comparatively, whites represent 56 percent of Division-I athletes, even though the nation is 76 percent white.
Surely, if the SAT was at all successful at suppressing the ability of black athletes to attend college, blacks would not be so greatly overrepresented as a percentage of the population of college athletes. One would think these percentages were a positive thing.
The NABC would like to remove the minimum standard of SAT and ACT scores from eligibility considerations so they can enroll an even greater number of athletically gifted but academically ill-prepared students all while academic misconduct scandals seem to pop up every year to great public outrage. These scandals grow from the avarice of universities, their financial boosters, and their athletic departments. Most of these scandals start when coaches or administrators try to protect the eligibility of high-level athletes who bring in millions of dollars in revenue for all involved (except the athletes, of course).
The proposal also extols the immeasurable value of receiving a bachelor’s degree and the need to increase minority access to higher institutions. Yet, once a student arrives on campus, he is under the near authoritarian power of his coach. These same coaches who want freer access for students also defend their right to prevent their athletes from transferring to other schools in the name of roster control. Coaches tend to forget about freedom and opportunity when its inconvenient.
If, as the NABC claims, test score requirements have remained constant while graduation rates rose, that does not suggest the tests are unnecessary it suggests a standardized test adequately measured the college readiness of student-athletes. The NCAA would not be supporting a racist institution by requiring an objective measure of academic readiness. It would be upholding the status of college athletes as students.
Given the number of colleges and universities waving the SAT requirement for general admission purposes, the NABC is within reason to ask the NCAA to wave the test as a requirement for this years incoming class. What isnt merited is their hyperbolic indignation that the SAT is unfairly holding back minority athletes.
The author has written for The Federalist before and here writes anonymously to protect his job in education.
Otis, my man.
I remember when Manley testified before Congress. Very moving.
I am so over basketball. Never liked the college scam, but I am over that and the pro pros, if you will.
They are neither interested in helping nor helping African-Americans with this self-interested push. Pandering plus trying to lower yet further the bar for college entry for blacks.
They disgust me.
The three-point shot ruined basketball.
It really doesn’t take a lot of skill to be a good three-point shooter, just a lot of practice.
It takes a lot more skill to thread a pass to make for an easy layup.
Was he fired for overestimating?
This is a(nother) really stupid article about this.
Division 1 basketball is a minor league for the NBA. The criteria for entry is skill with a round ball. Intelligence, and the ability to enroll in college-level classes, has ZERO to do with the business (which is, or was, worth multiple millions of dollars to colleges).
Stop the hypocrisy! If a good roundball player, raking in the $$ for some college, HAPPENS to be smart enough to also go to, and benefit from, college - fine. But don’t pretend that’s why most of them are there.
They are as competitive in their field as the nerdiest Chinese man from Shanghai is at MIT. Leave it at that.
*****
For clarity. Ain't buying or selling on the dude.
I dont think the coaches are going to like how this plays out.
They’re good at test taking, but wind up as engineer drones at companies. They lack leadership, gravitas, and soft skills.
As always, the answer is not to help black people do better, but make it more comfortable for them to do worse. And we wonder why there are racial disparities in America.
better yet, they should hire the affletes to play ball for them. .
yes, professional college ball players .
The Soft Bigotry of Low Expectations.
What, the old way of buying smart guys to sit in on the jocks’ tests and do their homework is not good enough anymore?
Our back-to-back Gator Championship teams, were probably the last great College Basketball Team. Players who all played different roles, and together were better than the sum of the parts.
College basketball has definitely deteroriated since with the “One and Done” crap.
Why, yes. Yes, they would.
In a way that’s a shame. Pat Summerall gave Tom Brooshier a big portion of the credit for helping him get clean and sober.
Zags are usually at the top of the academic performance rankings.
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