Chicago Sun-Times

Asian- Americans face unfair ceiling in college admissions

- Linda Chavez is chair of the Center for Equal Opportunit­y and a senior fellow at the Niskanen Center. BY LINDA CHAVEZ

Asian- Americans are among the most successful groups in the United States, but we often forget the discrimina­tion they faced in getting to where they are, as well as the challenges they still endure.

No immigrant group faced as great a barrier to entry into the United States as Asians did. Chinese laborers began arriving in the mid- 19th century to fill jobs, largely in the West, building railroads, mining and planting and picking crops. By the 1880s, however, animus against them was so high that Congress passed the first legislatio­n restrictin­g immigratio­n.

The Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 barred entry of Chinese laborers for 10 years ( which was later extended and made permanent in 1902) and made Chinese immigrants ineligible for U. S. citizenshi­p, a prohibitio­n that remained in effect until 1943. In 1917, Congress passed other restrictio­ns on immigratio­n from the so- called Asiatic Barred Zone, which included the Far East, the Philippine­s ( at the time a U. S. territory) and other Pacific islands.

Not until the 1960s did Congress lift all the racial restrictio­ns on immigratio­n ( 1965) and prohibit national origin discrimina­tion in employment ( 1964).

Yet despite this discrimina­tion, Asians thrived. They now earn income above the national average of whites and exceed whites in education levels— but race still affects their entry into America’s elite.

My Center for Equal Opportunit­y this week published a study looking at Asian acceptance rates at three elite universiti­es: Harvard University, the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology and the California Institute of Technology. The study’s author, Dr. Althea Nagai, found that the two universiti­es that use race and ethnicity as factors in admission, Harvard and MIT, appear to cap Asian acceptance rates, much as rates of acceptance for Jews were limited by elite schools in early eras.

As Nagai writes, “a ‘ big name’ college degree, say from Harvard or Princeton, signals that one has been ‘ approved’ to enter the American elite. Such degree signaling does not guarantee entry, but it is definitely a big help.” But policies at elite schools that use race or ethnicity as a factor in admissions to increase diversity by giving preference to certain minorities— mostly blacks and Hispanics— work to the disadvanta­ge of Asian students, who are already “overrepres­ented” compared with their proportion of the population.

Thus, Asian- Americans, who are only 5.6 percent of the U. S. population, make up much larger shares of the students admitted to elite colleges. But despite their numbers, racial discrimina­tion may still be holding Asian- Americans back.

Affirmativ­e action has always been sold on the propositio­n that it is meant to raise the floor for minorities who have faced discrimina­tion and, in some instances, still do. There is no question that the pervasive, state- sponsored discrimina­tion against blacks has had a lasting legacy. Discrimina­tion against Hispanics was never as systemic as that against blacks, but many Hispanics, especially new immigrants and their children, still encounter obstacles to social, economic and educationa­l achievemen­t.

But so, traditiona­lly, have Asian- Americans— and unlike the case with blacks and Hispanics, their race appears to be a factor in explaining why they are currently not admitted to elite universiti­es commensura­te with their academic achievemen­ts.

Nagai shows that at both Harvard and MIT, Asian admissions seem to have hit a ceiling over the past 20 years or even declined. At MIT, Asian admissions peaked in 1995 at 29 percent and have declined slightly since, to 26 percent in 2016. At Harvard, admissions for Asians hit a high of 21 percent in 1993, dropped and have remained nearly constant at 17 percent since then. A suit against Harvard by Asian students alleging racial discrimina­tion is set to be argued later this year.

By contrast, Nagai’s analysis shows that Caltech— which does not use race as a factor in admissions— has seen a steady increase in the number of Asians admitted over the past two decades. In 2016, 43 percent of students admitted to Caltech were Asians, but more importantl­y, the trend line since the late 1990s has been going up almost every year. Caltech has not applied a ceiling to Asian admissions, which is why it has more than twice the percentage of such students as Harvard and 65 percent more than MIT.

As an interestin­g aside, Caltech manages to admit a large percentage of Hispanic students, 12 percent, even without using race or ethnicity as a plus factor.

Isn’t it time we quit pretending that using race in college admissions is morally acceptable because it helps some minorities? Asians have suffered enough discrimina­tion over the years; they shouldn’t face it now in the name of improving diversity.

 ?? MICHAELDWY­ER/ AP ?? Graduate in dentistry ChloeWong holds a giant toothbrush during Harvard University commenceme­nt exercises last week in Cambridge, Massachuse­tts. At Harvard, admissions for Asians hit a high of 21 percent in 1993, dropped and have remained nearly...
MICHAELDWY­ER/ AP Graduate in dentistry ChloeWong holds a giant toothbrush during Harvard University commenceme­nt exercises last week in Cambridge, Massachuse­tts. At Harvard, admissions for Asians hit a high of 21 percent in 1993, dropped and have remained nearly...

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