Boston Herald

Harvard fails on admission of Asian-Americans

- By RICH LOWRY Rich Lowry is the editor of National Review.

The Harvard University admissions process appears to be an ongoing microaggre­ssion against Asian-Americans.

A group called Students for Fair Admissions is suing the school for alleged racial discrimina­tion and has filed documents in federal court making a persuasive case, based on data provided by the school.

Harvard denies it, but one of the imperative­s of the affirmativ­e action regime in college admissions is that schools never admit what they are doing.

The great and good at Harvard will insist that Asian-Americans all be called by their preferred pronouns, but they won’t afford them equal treatment in the admissions process. They will upbraid anyone daring to ask an Asian-American where he is from, but will, in effect, hold his ethnic background against him.

And they will do it by relying on the stereotype of Asian-Americans as dull, unrelatabl­e “model students.”

According to the analysis of Duke University economist Peter Arcidiacon­o, an expert for the plaintiffs, an Asian-American applicant who is male, is not economical­ly disadvanta­ged and has, based on his other characteri­stics, a 25 percent chance of getting in would see his odds markedly increase if he belonged to another group. His chances of admission would be 36 percent if he were white; 77 percent if he were Hispanic; and 95 percent if he were black.

Why is this? Among Harvard applicants, AsianAmeri­cans have the highest average SAT scores and the highest academic index, combining the SAT and high school performanc­e. Somehow, though, they manage the lowest admission rates.

They supposedly fall down on their personal ratings, which includes the question of whether the applicants have a “positive personalit­y.”

It just so happens that, per Harvard, otherwise high-achieving AsianAmeri­cans are beset by chronicall­y negative personalit­ies. It’s amazing that they somehow manage to do well in school and extensivel­y participat­e in extracurri­cular activities despite their glum outlook and downbeat personas. Alumni interviewe­rs who actually meet them tend to rate them highly. No matter.

Harvard’s “holistic” approach to admissions allows it to adjust the knobs to get the demographi­c mix that it prefers. There’s precedent for this. In the 1920s, as a report of the Center for Equal Opportunit­y notes, Harvard changed its admissions process away from an exclusive focus on academics to considerin­g the whole person, which allowed it to reverse an unwelcome run-up in Jewish admissions and keep the percentage of Jews in the student body at about 15 percent for decades.

Like the Jews before them, Asian-Americans are deemed “unclubbabl­e” by many elite universiti­es seeking to keep their admissions down.

The Center for Equal Opportunit­y report notes the contrast between Caltech, which doesn’t have affirmativ­e action, and Harvard, which does. At Caltech, Asian-Americans make up more than 40 percent of undergradu­ates, a proportion that has grown robustly since 2000. At Harvard, Asian-American representa­tion topped out at 21 percent in 1993, before dipping below 20 percent for a couple of decades (it’s now 22 percent).

A 2013 internal Harvard analysis, according to the lawsuit, said that AsianAmeri­cans would make up 43 percent of admissions if academics alone were the factor.

If Harvard applied its own standards to Harvard, it would be appalled by how it’s disadvanta­ging members of a minority group. It would encourage protests. It would refer itself for racial bias training. It would apologize and grovel and hope it all could be a teaching moment. But none of this will happen because it could lead to the admission of “too many Asians,” the scenario that its admissions policies and related subterfuge are designed to prevent.

The lawsuit includes an exchange with a teacher at exclusive Stuyvesant High School in New York City who breaks down and cries when she’s shown data on how much less likely her Asian students are to make it into Harvard. She’s upset by the unfairness of it — would that Harvard felt the same way.

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