-------- Original Message --------
Subject:        Race (Still) Matters
Date:   Mon, 13 Aug 2007 21:22:19 -0400
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Race (Still) Matters

http://insidehighered.com/news/2007/08/13/race

Aug. 13

Advocates for black students have long turned to social
scientists for help. Think of Kenneth Clark's
experiments with children and black and white dolls,
work that was cited in Brown v. Board of Education.
More recently, social scientists were mobilized to file
briefs (with some success) on behalf of landmark
Supreme Court decisions in 2003 that upheld affirmative
action in public college admissions in some
circumstances and (without success) in this year's
Supreme Court decision rejecting two school districts'
use of race in school assignments.

With voters and the courts increasingly skeptical of
affirmative action in college admissions, scholars
gathered at the annual meeting Sunday of the American
Sociological Association presented new research
designed to shift the debate. The scholars, all
supporters of affirmative action, said that they
recognized that arguments were being shot down if based
only on the lack of diversity that would result from
the elimination of affirmative action. If voters are
warned that ending affirmative action will result in
sharp drops in black and Latino enrollments, voters (or
at least white voters) will go ahead and abolish
affirmative action, speakers said.

As a result, the research presented was less about the
fact that eliminating affirmative action results in
such enrollment shifts, but that such drops do not mean
that black students (the focus of much of the
discussion) have not demonstrated "merit." Robert T.
Teranishi, assistant professor of higher education at
New York University, said that his research was
designed to counter the "blaming the victim" mentality
in which he said people assume black enrollment
declines suggest a lack of merit by black students.

The reality, he said, is that a new form of school
segregation has taken hold in which in post-affirmative
action California, the best way for a black or Latino
student to get into a University of California campus
is to attend a "white" high school.

Teranishi's research focuses on California high schools
and the relationship between attending high schools
with certain characteristics and enrolling at a
University of California campus. He started by noting
that while California is famous for its ethnic and
racial diversity (in statewide totals), 88 percent of
high schools have a racial majority of one group. Of
those schools, he said, 44.7 percent have a white
majority, while 43.4 percent have a black or Latino
majority. But among new University of California
students, 65.3 percent come from white majority schools
and only 21.7 percent come from black or Latino
majority schools.

From there, Teranishi presented data showing
educational inequities in the different kinds of
schools, such as studies showing that the greater the
proportion of black and Latino students in a high
school, the fewer Advanced Placement courses that are
likely to be offered.

The cumulative impact of these inequities is such that
minority students who are admitted to top University of
California campuses are more likely to have attended
white majority schools than other schools. At Berkeley,
for example, 48.9 percent of the underrepresented
minority students admitted attended white majority high
schools, while 33.6 percent attended high schools that
were black or Latino majority and 17.5 percent attended
high schools without a racial majority. At the
University of California at San Diego, the percentage
of new black and Latino students coming from white
majority high schools is 52.6 percent.

Teranishi said that such data should shake up people
who think that some pure idea of merit is at play in
selecting the best students for top colleges. Is it
fair to tell black and Latino students, he asked, that
to have a good chance at getting into UCLA or Berkeley,
"they need to attend a white school"?

Walter Allen, professor of higher education at UCLA,
said that what the data suggest are that admissions
systems supposedly designed to favor merit are in fact
systems that "protect privilege" and end up ripping off
black and Latino people generally - either as would-be
students or as taxpayers. "The poor folks are
subsidizing the educations of wealthy people," he said.

Another research program presented at the meeting is
the Educational Diversity Project, which involves
surveys of students at 50 law schools nationwide in a
new effort to determine the educational impact of
having (or not having) a diverse student body in law
school. Students are taking a series of surveys on
demographics, educational achievement, and their path
to law school and researchers are now following up with
focus group interviews on their law school experience.

Early data in the project show that white law students
are significantly more likely than minority students to
have been raised by two parents and to have had English
spoken as the primary language at home, while minority
students are more likely to have experienced
discrimination in college and to expect to work more
hours in law school than their classmates just to keep
up. Much more analysis - especially on the experience
in law school - is expected in the next few years.

There was some disagreement about the role social
scientists may play in reshaping public attitudes about
affirmative action. These projects suggest a belief
that the right studies can have an impact, and several
audience members encouraged more such work.

But Ellis Cose, a columnist for Newsweek who has
written extensively about affirmative action and race,
said that it may take both good research and a new
Supreme Court to change the direction of thinking about
affirmative action. He noted that a who's who of
prominent social scientists had backed a brief in this
year's Supreme Court case, arguing that their research
supported the actions of the school districts in using
race to assign students to schools.

Effectively what the Supreme Court said, according to
Cose, was "we don't care what social scientists think."

- Scott Jaschik

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