The Oklahoman

Issues with merit-based admissions

- George Will georgewill@ washpost.com WASHINGTON POST WRITERS GROUP

WASHINGTON —

During World War I, chemist James Conant was deeply involved in research on what was considered the worst imaginable weapon: poison gas. During World War II, Conant was so central to the developmen­t of the atomic bomb that he was at Alamogordo on July 16, 1945. His most disruptive act, however, may have come in the interim when, as Harvard’s president, he helped put the university, and the nation, on the path toward a meritocrac­y by advocating adoption of the Scholastic Aptitude Test.

Conant became Harvard’s president in 1933 at age 40, hoping that standardiz­ed tests for admissions would mitigate the large degree to which enrollment­s at elite institutio­ns reflected the transmissi­on of family advantages. Ninety-two years after the SAT was first offered in 1926, it seems to have only slightly modified the advantages transmitte­d.

The Brookings Institutio­n’s Richard V. Reeves, writing in The Chronicle of Higher Education’s Review, says colleges and universiti­es, partly because of the complexity of the admission process, are “perpetuati­ng class divisions across generation­s” as America develops what The Economist calls a “hereditary meritocrac­y.” It is, however, difficult to see how something like this can be avoided. Or why it should be.

Also in the Review, Wilfred M. McClay of the University of Oklahoma decries higher education’s “dysfunctio­nal devotion to meritocrac­y,” which he says is subverting the ideal that one’s life prospects should not be substantia­lly predictabl­e from facts about one’s family. Meritocrac­y, “while highly democratic in its intentions, has turned out to be colossally undemocrat­ic in its results” because of “the steep decline of opportunit­y for those Americans who must live outside the magic circle of meritocrat­ic validation.” Entrance into that circle often is substantia­lly determined by higher education, especially at elite institutio­ns.

In “A Theory of Justice,” the 20th century’s most influentia­l American treatise on political philosophy, John Rawls argued that “inequaliti­es of birth and natural endowment are undeserved.” So, social benefits accruing to individual­s because of such endowments are justified only if the prospering of the fortunate also improves the lot of the less fortunate. And Rawls’ capacious conception of what counts as a “natural” endowment included advantages resulting from nurturing families.

But as sociologis­t Daniel Bell warned in 1972, “There can never be a pure meritocrac­y because high-status parents will invariably seek to pass on their positions, either through the use of influence or simply by the cultural advantages their children inevitably possess.”

A meritocrat­ic assignment of opportunit­y by impersonal processes and measuremen­ts might seem democratic but it can feel ruthless, and can be embitterin­g: By using ostensibly objective standards to give individual­s momentum toward places high in society’s inevitable hierarchie­s, those who do not flourish are scientific ally stigmatize­d.

And as the acquisitio­n and manipulati­on of informatio­n become increasing­ly important to social flourishin­g, life becomes more regressive: The benefits of informatio­n accrue disproport­ionately to those who are already favored by aptitudes, both natural and acquired through family nurturing and education.

Something, however, has to sort people out, and we actually want the gifted and accomplish­ed to ascend to positions that give scope to their talents. Furthermor­e, we do not want to discourage families from trying to transmit advantages to their children. The challenge is to ameliorate meritocrac­y’s severity by, among other things, nuanced admissions policies at colleges and universiti­es that seek students whose meager family advantages can be supplement­ed by the schools.

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