The Sunday Telegraph

Harvard accused of stereotypi­ng Asian applicants

- By Harriet Alexander

in New York HARVARD University has been accused of racism against Asian students because of perceived negative personalit­y traits, according to court documents filed on Friday.

The 388-year-old institutio­n is being sued by Students for Fair Admissions, an action group, for discrimina­ting against Asian applicants.

The group commission­ed an analysis of more than 160,000 applicants who applied for admission from 2000 to 2015, which showed that Asians were given lower scores on “personalit­y” traits – likeabilit­y, courage, kindness and being “widely respected”.

It argues that if admitted on academic merit alone, the intake of Asian students at the prestigiou­s university would be much higher.

Ted Lieu, a congressma­n for California, blasted Harvard for appearing to “attribute personalit­y traits based on race”. He called the report “outrageous”, adding that “it feeds into historical damaging stereotype­s about Asian-Americans.”

Students for Fair Admissions likened the report’s findings of alleged discrimina­tion to anti-Semitism in the 20th century. “It turns out that the suspicions of Asian-American alumni, students and applicants were right all along,” the group said in a court document laying out the analysis.

“Harvard today engages in the same kind of discrimina­tion and stereotypi­ng that it used to justify quotas on Jewish applicants in the Twenties and Thirties.”

In response, Harvard commission­ed its own study, which described the report as “incomplete and misleading”.

The documents are a prelude to a trial scheduled for the autumn, and come at the same time as the US government’s justice department investigat­es Harvard’s admission policies for evidence of bias. The filings give the public the most detailed look ever at Harvard’s method for selecting its incoming undergradu­ate class.

Harvard, the oldest university in the US, remains its most selective. It admitted only 4.6 per cent of applicants this year, while Princeton and Columbia admitted 5.5 per cent, and Yale took 6.3 per cent of those wishing to attend.

Each Harvard applicant is given four component ratings – academic, extracurri­cular, athletic and personal. Within each category, applicants are scored on a scale from one to six, with one being the best. Admissions decisions are made by a 40-person committee vote.

The plaintiffs found in their analysis that Asian-American applicants had higher academic and extra-curricular scores than any other racial group.

However, Harvard assigns AsianAmeri­cans the lowest score of any racial group on the personal rating, which includes a subjective assessment of character traits such as whether they had a “positive personalit­y”, the plaintiffs said.

Vintage fashion

 ??  ?? Older models – members of the public cast from the streets – took to Dolce & Gabbana’s catwalk in Milan yesterday. “Fashion speaks to everyone without any limitation of race, ethnicity, or age,” said the Italian fashion house.
Older models – members of the public cast from the streets – took to Dolce & Gabbana’s catwalk in Milan yesterday. “Fashion speaks to everyone without any limitation of race, ethnicity, or age,” said the Italian fashion house.

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