Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How will this affect universities trying for gender parity? Eg 39,000 female applicants and 22,000 make applicants but they admit males at higher rate to have a near 50-50 class?
Depends on how narrow or wide the SC rules against affirmative action.
Forgot to add that Noah Feldman (Harvard Law) addressed this:
Universities would no longer be allowed to pursue racial diversity, gender diversity, sexual orientation diversity or religious diversity. (They would still be allowed to pursue economic diversity, class diversity, viewpoint diversity and geographic diversity, because these categories aren’t protected against discrimination by the Constitution or civil rights laws.) https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/supreme-court-will-end-the-era-of-college-diversity/2022/10/16/4716c656-4d53-11ed-ada8-04e6e6bf8b19_story.html
Given how polarized and segregated we all are, location and class are almost as good predictor of race as the ethnicity box. Some clever admission officers will be able to achieve all the diversity they want by using allowed criteria— hopefully
Anonymous wrote:Higher education shoud be mainly for acedemic merit and must be color blind.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How will this affect universities trying for gender parity? Eg 39,000 female applicants and 22,000 make applicants but they admit males at higher rate to have a near 50-50 class?
Depends on how narrow or wide the SC rules against affirmative action.
Forgot to add that Noah Feldman (Harvard Law) addressed this:
Universities would no longer be allowed to pursue racial diversity, gender diversity, sexual orientation diversity or religious diversity. (They would still be allowed to pursue economic diversity, class diversity, viewpoint diversity and geographic diversity, because these categories aren’t protected against discrimination by the Constitution or civil rights laws.) https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/supreme-court-will-end-the-era-of-college-diversity/2022/10/16/4716c656-4d53-11ed-ada8-04e6e6bf8b19_story.html
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Higher education shoud be mainly for acedemic merit and must be color blind.
Actually, higher education is about far more than just academics.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How will this affect universities trying for gender parity? Eg 39,000 female applicants and 22,000 make applicants but they admit males at higher rate to have a near 50-50 class?
Depends on how narrow or wide the SC rules against affirmative action.
Universities would no longer be allowed to pursue racial diversity, gender diversity, sexual orientation diversity or religious diversity. (They would still be allowed to pursue economic diversity, class diversity, viewpoint diversity and geographic diversity, because these categories aren’t protected against discrimination by the Constitution or civil rights laws.) https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/supreme-court-will-end-the-era-of-college-diversity/2022/10/16/4716c656-4d53-11ed-ada8-04e6e6bf8b19_story.html
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Higher education shoud be mainly for acedemic merit and must be color blind.
Actually, higher education is about far more than just academics.
Anonymous wrote:How will this affect universities trying for gender parity? Eg 39,000 female applicants and 22,000 make applicants but they admit males at higher rate to have a near 50-50 class?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Higher education shoud be mainly for acedemic merit and must be color blind.
Actually, higher education is about far more than just academics.
If they go color-blind, they could still build diversity based on geographic location.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Higher education shoud be mainly for acedemic merit and must be color blind.
Actually, higher education is about far more than just academics.
Anonymous wrote:Higher education shoud be mainly for acedemic merit and must be color blind.