Schools brace for scrutiny on race
Selective colleges often use it as a factor in their admissions processes
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. - A Justice Department inquiry into how race influences admissions at Harvard University has left selective colleges bracing for new scrutiny of practices that have helped boost diversity levels to new highs across the Ivy League.
Harvard and other top-tier colleges closely guard the inner workings of their admissions offices, but they defend approaches that consider an applicant’s race among other factors as a way to bring a diverse mix of perspectives to campus. While the schools believe they are on firm legal ground, experts say the investigation could inspire new challenges.
“They’re pulling the scab off a wound that was healing,” said Anthony Carnevale, who has studied affirmative action programs and leads Georgetown University’s Center for Education and the Workforce. “This could erupt in a bunch more cases.”
At the eight Ivy League colleges including Harvard, Yale and Princeton, the number of U.S. minority students in all incoming classes grew by 17% between 2010 and ’15, while overall enrollment in those classes grew by less than 2%, according to the latest federal data. By 2015, minorities accounted for more than 43% of all incoming students in the Ivy League, up from 37% in 2010.
The trend partly reflects the demographics of an increasingly diverse nation, but the schools also consider race for reasons including a desire to reverse historically low numbers of minorities at elite universities that in some cases began admitting nonwhite students only in the last 75 years.
“We’re aiming for diversity on our campus and we’re achieving it,” said Christopher Eisgruber, president of Princeton University. “Universities have a compelling interest in pursuing diversity in their student bodies through a holistic assessment of factors.”
Eisgruber said he is not surprised by the “continuing political controversy,” but it would not be appropriate for him to comment on the Justice Department investigation.
At Brown University, the inquiry was a topic of discussion last week, school spokesman Brian Clark said.
“The courts have held that colleges and universities may act affirmatively to achieve the educational goals at the core of our academic excellence at Brown,” Clark said in a statement.
“Through our raceconscious admission practices, Brown assembles the diverse range of perspectives and experiences essential for a learning and research community that prepares students to thrive in a complex and changing world.”
Word of the investigation startled some who thought the affirmative action debate was settled after the U.S. Supreme Court last year upheld race-conscious admissions at the University of Texas. That case was brought by a white student who contended she was rejected from the school while black students with lower grades were admitted.