z**k 发帖数: 945 | 1 http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB1000142405270230473280457
LEGAL CHALLENGE IS ON THE WAY
With the U.S. Supreme Court poised to rule on race-conscious college-
admissions policies, University of California officials say they still
struggle to meet diversity goals for their university system 18 years after
state voters banned affirmative action.
For that reason, UC officials filed a friend-of-the-court brief in the
Supreme Court's review of a nearly identical ban at Michigan's public
universities.
"The UC experience is highly relevant," their brief said. Nearly two decades
after the ban passed, "the University of California still struggles to
enroll a student body that encompasses the broad racial diversity of the
state."
The takeaway from UC's experience isn't clear-cut. The percentage of
admitted Latino and African-American resident applicants at the UC system's
most competitive campuses in Berkeley and Los Angeles dropped to 12% in 2013
from about 46% before Proposition 209's affirmative-action ban was approved
by voters in 1996.
Since California banned the use of affirmative action in admissions 18 years
ago, officials at the statewide university system say minority enrollment
at the most competitive campuses, in Berkeley and Los Angeles, has slid.
Here, the UCLA campus on a recent day Emily Berl for The Wall Street Journal
But several scholars—at UC and elsewhere—say the university has overstated
the negative impact of Prop. 209, pointing to research that shows the
number of minority students at UC overall has grown and these students'
graduation rates have improved.
While the numbers of incoming African-American students is down at the two
most elite campuses, and Latino enrollment at both hasn't kept pace with
California's fast-rising Latino population, the percentage of incoming
freshmen Latino and African-American resident students roughly doubled
during the same period across UC's undergraduate campuses.
Now nearly two decades after Prop. 209 was passed, affirmative action in
college admissions is at a crossroads.
In November 2012, Michigan's higher-education affirmative-action ban was
overturned by the Sixth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. A decision in the
case, Schuette v. Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action, is expected soon.
If the Supreme Court affirms the lower court's ruling, California and a
handful of other states could use the precedent to challenge their own bans.
Washington, Nebraska, Arizona, Oklahoma, Florida and New Hampshire also
have banned public institutions from employing race-based affirmative action.
California's law, which eliminated racial preferences in public education,
public employment and government contracts, has withstood multiple legal
challenges and Govs. Arnold Schwarzenegger and Jerry Brown have both vetoed
repeal attempts.
UC has spent more than a half-billion dollars since 1998—when the ban took
effect—on outreach programs and has tailored eligibility requirements and
application reviews to attract and admit more low-income and first-
generation students, many of whom are minorities. System leaders say they
are still unable to meet diversity goals systemwide—particularly at UCLA
and Berkeley.
UC Associate President and Chief Policy Advisor Nina Robinson says the ban "
completely changed the character" of the university.
When the state's most elite universities are less diverse, she said, "It
doesn't provide our students with a level of diversity they need in order to
learn about other cultures and other communities," which she says is
important for the state's future leaders.
The UC system "trains judges, doctors and politicians for California," Ms.
Robinson said. When those students leave the state, "that's not necessarily
good for us."
According to university research, she said, "students of color who are at
the very top of their class and have everything it takes to get into a great
private or public institution—many of those students will be admitted to
private colleges and universities and…often get very positive scholarship
packages."
Researchers say minority students have benefited in some ways from changes
to affirmative action. In a 2013 paper, a group of economists at Duke
University and the London School of Economics found that "underrepresented
minorities were 4.4 percentage points more likely to graduate" systemwide
after Prop. 209 went into effect, which they attribute in part to the
schools "focusing more resources on the retention of their enrolled students
."
Peter Arcidiacono, a Duke professor and one of that study's authors, says
affirmative-action bans have had "very little effect on whether [minority]
students enroll in college or graduate from college, but it does affect
where they graduate from." That was evident, he said, in those students' "
big shift away from graduating from UCLA and Berkeley."
Richard Kahlenberg, an education researcher at the liberal think-tank the
Century Foundation, says it is wrong to view the experience of prestigious
schools like Berkeley, UCLA and the University of Michigan as emblematic of
the impact of race-neutral admissions policies.
In a 2012 study of 10 public universities that employed "race-neutral
alternatives to affirmative action"—such as California's outreach and
changes to eligibility criteria—Mr. Kahlenberg's organization found that at
seven, "the representation of African-Americans and Latinos met or exceeded
the levels achieved when the universities had used racial preferences."
Berkeley, UCLA and the University of Michigan were the exceptions, he said,
because they are recruiting the same group of students as many elite private
colleges that can consider race in admission and offer more scholarships.
Competitive public universities face "a tilted playing field."
Should opponents reverse the ban, the UC system could again consider race in
admissions, but schools would face new federal guidelines.
Following a Supreme Court ruling last year on how to consider race-conscious
admissions in pursuit of diversity, the Justice Department and Department
of Education provided guidance. A school "should consider whether it can
meet its compelling interest in diversity by using race-neutral approaches,"
the guidance states.
In cases where race is taken into account, it "cannot be given so much
weight that applicants are defined primarily by their race and are largely
accepted or rejected on that basis."
Bill Jacobs, chairman of the systemwide Academic Senate and former head of
UC's Board of Admissions and Relations with Schools, said that "by and large
, we've been putting all those practices in place."
According to the university, the percentage of first-generation
undergraduate students rose to 42% in 2013 from 34% 10 years earlier. And
more than 40% of the system's undergraduates are from low-income families.
Write to Erica E. Phillips at e************[email protected] | g*q 发帖数: 26623 | 2 The UC system "trains judges, doctors and politicians for California," Ms.
Robinson said. When those students leave the state, "that's not necessarily
good for us."
这个好办,以后UC就只留下judges and politicians,把理工科学生全踢出去好了 |
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