Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

FROM CAMPUS TO CONGRESS, COLLEGES URGED TO END ADMISSIONS LEGACY BOOST

- BY COLLIN BINKLEY

America’s elite colleges are facing growing calls to end the decades-old tradition of giving an admissions boost to the children of alumni — a practice that critics say is rooted in racism and bestows an unfair advantage to students who need it least.

Fueled by the national reckoning with racial injustice, opponents say they are gaining momentum in the battle over the contentiou­s policy of legacy preference­s.

Ivy League students are pressing administra­tors to abandon the policy. Yale’s student government took a stance against the practice in November. A recent vote of Harvard students found that 60% oppose it. Hundreds of students and alumni across 30 colleges have promised to withhold financial donations over the issue.

Civil rights groups are increasing­ly adding their support, including the American Civil Liberties Union, which is tackling legacy preference­s as part of a campaign against systematic racism.

And a bill in Congress aims to eliminate the practice.

The proposal from Democrats would outlaw preference­s for children of alumni or donors at colleges that receive federal money. It’s being pushed by the party’s progressiv­e wing but has gained support from some conservati­ve activists who want college admissions to be based on merit alone.

Legacy preference­s give an extra boost to predominan­tly white and wealthy legacy students, while “leaving out millions of Black and brown kids,” said Rep. Jamaal Bowman, D-N.Y., a sponsor.

“There has been a shift in the consciousn­ess of the country around issues of inequity and inequality,” Bowman said in an interview. “There’s a real yearning to right the wrongs of our past.”

In the heavily guarded world of college admissions, it’s hard to know exactly how many legacy students get a nudge. But at some of the most selective colleges, students with family ties make up 10% to 20% of the latest incoming class, according to data released by colleges in response to an Associated Press request.

On many campuses, the opposition is being led by students of color and those who are the first in their families to attend college. They say legacy status is one more advantage for students who are already more likely to have access to tutoring, test prep and other help applying to college.

Zoe Fuad, a junior at Brown University, said it reinforces a “cycle of inequity” that was designed to serve wealthy white men.

“By perpetuall­y giving advantages to their descendant­s, we’re ensuring that those who were systemical­ly favored continue to be favored,” said Fuad, 20, who leads a student group that’s challengin­g the practice at Brown.

Many prestigiou­s colleges defend legacy admissions, saying it helps build an alumni community and encourages donations. Officials at Harvard and other schools argue that legacy status is just one of many factors considered in admissions, along with grades, test scores and pursuits outside school. At most, they say, it can provide a slight tip in a student’s favor.

Still, two colleges have ended the practice recently, giving opponents hope that others will follow.

Amherst College in Massachuse­tts dropped the policy in October, saying it “inadverten­tly limits educationa­l opportunit­y.” Johns Hopkins University announced in 2020 that it had phased out legacy preference­s. Since then, the school has drawn growing numbers of Black and Hispanic students, along with those from low-income families.

The pushback against legacy preference­s is advancing amid a broader debate over fairness in college admissions.

Last month the Supreme Court agreed to review whether colleges can consider applicants’ race as a way to expand diversity. The court will take up lawsuits alleging that Harvard University and the University of North Carolina discrimina­te against Asian American applicants in favor of Black and Hispanic students.

In a rare moment of bipartisan unity, the conservati­ve strategist behind those suits voiced support for the Democrats’ bill against legacy benefits. In a statement, Edward Blum said too many colleges “lower the admissions bar for the children of their alumni.”

Most schools are not required to disclose how many legacy students they enroll, and many keep it private. Among the nation’s 30 most selective colleges, only eight provided basic data on the subject in response to an AP request.

At those colleges, the share of legacy students in this year’s freshman class averaged 12%. The lowest share was at Rice University in Houston, where 4% of this year’s first-year class had legacy status. The University of Notre Dame said legacy students have averaged 23% of the student body over the past decade.

 ?? STEVEN SENNE/AP ?? Brown University junior Zoe Fuad, of Spring, Texas, says admissions policies that allow legacy boosts reinforce a “cycle of inequity.”
STEVEN SENNE/AP Brown University junior Zoe Fuad, of Spring, Texas, says admissions policies that allow legacy boosts reinforce a “cycle of inequity.”

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