The content discusses the impact of the Supreme Court's decision to ban race-based affirmative action policies on Black student enrollment in colleges and universities. Prior to the ban, these policies were used to help alleviate the racism that Black applicants faced in the admissions process, making a meaningful difference. However, the conservative Supreme Court justices argued for a "colorblind" process, which Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson warned would not make racism go away, but rather make it matter more.
The article notes that while Harvard University has not yet reported its demographic profile, several other schools have reported a drop in the share of Black and other racially marginalized students following the ban on affirmative action. This suggests that without policies designed to foster equity, some Black students are feeling the sting of rejection and facing barriers to accessing higher education. The author argues that ignoring race does not make it matter less, and that the Supreme Court's decision has made things worse, not better, in terms of addressing systemic racism in college admissions.
Іншою мовою
із вихідного контенту
allyfromnola.medium.com
Ключові висновки, отримані з
by Allison Wilt... о allyfromnola.medium.com 09-07-2024
https://allyfromnola.medium.com/why-black-student-enrollment-is-dropping-after-supreme-court-decision-d468a7e07741Глибші Запити