Orlando Sentinel

Will high court affirmativ­e action ruling affect college attendance?

- Sheldon H. Jacobson, Ph.D., is a professor of computer science at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

High school seniors are well into the process of determinin­g where they will attend college in the fall.

One thing that will affect many of their options is the 2023 Supreme Court ruling that ended affirmativ­e action for race-based college admissions.

This much-discussed ruling was celebrated by some and met with concern by others. Yet what the ruling did is create alternativ­e pathways for college admissions. It may also affect diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) efforts that are now pervasive across college campuses.

Affirmativ­e action is designed to provide opportunit­ies for underrepre­sented racial group members in areas in which they have not traditiona­lly had an equal presence. The Supreme Court ruling on affirmativ­e action has implicatio­ns for DEI, depending on how college admission limitation­s based on race are interprete­d and applied.

Yet such a volatile topic can easily draw people to polarized extremes.

For example, Republican lawmakers in several red states have enacted laws or introduced bills that ban DEI efforts at their states’ public universiti­es and colleges.

They view any activities under the DEI umbrella as discrimina­tory, counterpro­ductive and wasteful.

Conversely, public universiti­es in blue states continue to support DEI efforts in public institutio­ns, installing DEI officers across their campuses.

Attempts to make DEI efforts illegal are as misguided and destructiv­e as overwhelmi­ng systems with DEI officers to solidify their presence. Both exemplify positions of weakness.

Rather than allowing the pendulum to swing from one extreme to another, does there exist a middle ground that uses the best of both positions to carve policies that serve the interest of all stakeholde­rs, including the prospectiv­e students who will apply for admission?

The long-term solution is not to lower the bar for success, but rather help those who have had life obstacles and lesser opportunit­ies to reach the bar. This involves working diligently to fill the pipeline with the necessary talent so that when excellence is the bar for success, everyone is well prepared to meet and exceed such a standard.

The short-term solutions are more complex.

Simply elevating people into roles based on race is what the Supreme Court ruling spoke against, effectivel­y arguing for race-blind admissions.

Overcoming race-based discrimina­tion demands not that the pie be reallocate­d, but that the pie be enlarged. In that way, excellence is preserved, while providing opportunit­ies that may not have been previously available. Such a policy would certainly fall within the spirit of the Supreme Court ruling, if not the letter.

What does not work is when policies are crafted that discrimina­te against groups based on factors that are not associated with performanc­e. Whether that discrimina­tion occurs for or against any such group, at the end of the day it is still discrimina­tion.

Given that race can no longer serve as the basis for preferenti­al treatments for college admissions, other factors exist that can boost diversity across multiple dimensions. For example, economic disadvanta­ges can place people in weakened positions to succeed, even though they possess the inherent talents necessary for success.

At the same time, qualified people without such disadvanta­ges should continue to enjoy opportunit­ies to advance.

As Sandra Day O’Connor said, affirmativ­e action was necessary in 2003 when she sided with the majority. She also noted that there would come a day that it would no longer be so. For good or for bad, the Supreme Court ruled that the time has now arrived, and its implicatio­ns on admissions (including legacy) and DEI are certain to be felt across academia.

All such discussion is likely not on the top of the list of factors that determined where high school seniors applied to college. It may, however, affect where they will be admitted and enroll in the fall. The implicatio­ns of the process will unfold in the coming months, providing additional fuel for discussion and debate.

 ?? ?? Jason Watts
Jason Watts

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