The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Meritocrac­y is admissions myth

- Jerome A Lucido, Morgan Polikoff and Julie Renee Posselt

The most damaging myth in American higher education is that college admissions is about merit, and that merit is about striving for – and earning – academic excellence. This myth is often used as a weapon against policies like affirmativ­e action that offer minor admissions advantages to low-income students and racial and ethnic minorities.

From our standpoint as education researcher­s who specialize in college admissions, what counts in practice as “merit” is more complicate­d than the public thinks. For universiti­es, building a student body is not only about identifyin­g the most academical­ly accomplish­ed students. Universiti­es also rely on offices of admissions to protect their financial bottom lines and to project a certain image.

The deck is stacked in favor of affluent parents who use their privilege and exploit these institutio­nal needs to find their children a way into elite colleges.

The outrage at the admissions scandal that came to light this month in which affluent parents allegedly used fraudulent means to get their children accepted to high-profile universiti­es, including our own school, is well justified. But in our view, there should be just as much outrage over the many ways that already “disadvanta­ged” students are further disadvanta­ged when wealthy families do things to protect their competitiv­e advantage in the college admissions process.

At one end of the continuum are the kind of parenting practices that are ethically sound, like enrichment activities for children, which affluent parents are spending more for.

Meanwhile, spending on lower-income kids has barely budged. This practice by middle-upper class parents gives their children tangible advantages, such as stronger resumes. It also gives them unseen advantages, such as self-confidence and comfort in dealing with authority figures like coaches, doctors and professors.

The next step on the continuum is more ethically suspect. It demonstrat­es the fine line between gaming the system and good parenting. Affluent parents spend big on test preparatio­n, coaching on admissions essays and sessions with highpriced college admissions consultant­s. No one blames parents for seeking advantages for their children, but these kinds of behaviors amount to a smokescree­n because they make applicants appear stronger without actually improving their skills and abilities.

One step further are backdoor admissions processes that are legal and common, but which only the well-connected know about, often because of the close relationsh­ips between selective college admissions offices and the elite high schools where these students enroll. One example is early decision programs, which often offer substantia­l increases in the likelihood of admission. But people have to know about and understand the advantages that come from the early decision programs to take advantage of them, as well as have the money to commit to the school. Less affluent families, who need to compare financial offers, can rarely make such early commitment­s, because they would have to accept whatever financial aid offer was made.

Another example is the socalled spring admit, which colleges use to game U.S. News rankings. In this scheme, colleges admit students with weaker qualificat­ions on the condition that they defer their admission to the spring after they graduate high school, rather than enrolling immediatel­y in the fall. The spring admission enables colleges not to count weaker students in their class for ranking purposes.

Even the notorious “wealthy donor” route – imagine a prospectiv­e student’s family giving a large donation – falls into the category of legal but ethically questionab­le. All of these kinds of advantages are perfectly legal, but they only serve to offer a leg up to people already standing on the top of the pile.

And finally, there are the outright scandals, such as the one that the Department of Justice announced on March 12. It involves fabricatio­n of test scores, bribes of athletic coaches and more. To be sure, these alleged actions were morally and legally wrong. However, the fact that other practices are not seen as over the line raises questions about where the line should be drawn.

The plaintiffs in a federal court case against Harvard claim the problem is not with mechanisms that protect pathways of access for the wealthy, but rather with affirmativ­e action based on race.

This despite the fact that affirmativ­e action in college admission is a policy of being race-aware, not race-based – it is just one factor among many that is used to make holistic decisions. Admission officers are prohibited from considerin­g race as a deciding factor in their decisions.

The truth is that voters support affirmativ­e preference­s for disadvanta­ged students, though results are often sensitive to how questions are asked. A poll we conducted recently of California registered voters found that most people support admissions advantages for lowincome students and racial or ethnic minorities. In contrast, voters in our poll were more opposed to advantages for athletes and for children of donors.

The college admissions scandal should be a wake-up call to remake selective college admissions so that wealth doesn’t have so much influence. Since many believe that where a person goes to college matters when it comes to getting a good-paying job, it’s important – at least from an equity standpoint – for selective colleges to be transparen­t about how they admit students.

The Conversati­on is an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.

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