AEIdeas
 
 
At the Ivies, Asians are the new Jews
_Charles  Murray_ (http://www.aei-ideas.org/author/cmurray/)  | December 
11, 2012

 
 
It has been documented for some time that Asian applicants to the Ivies 
face  a stiff test-score penalty in the admissions process—Asians have to get 
higher  SAT scores than members of other races to have an equal chance of 
admission. But  it’s one thing to have a higher bar for Asians. It’s still 
worse to have an  Asian quota. 
Ron Unz took the evidence of discrimination against Asians to a new level 
in  a long article in the current issue of American Conservative, _“The Myth 
of American Meritocracy.”_ 
(http://www.theamericanconservative.com/articles/the-myth-of-american-meritocracy)
  As _Steve Sailer has noted_ 
(http://isteve.blogspot.com/2012/12/who-is-interested-in-elite-college.html) , 
Unz’s 
findings have received  astonishingly little coverage. “Astonishingly,” because 
Unz has documented what  looks very much like a tacitly common policy on 
the part of the Ivies to cap  Asian admissions at about 16% of undergraduates, 
give or take a few percentage  points, no matter what the quality of Asian 
applicants might be.That’s a strong  statement, but consider the data that 
Unz has assembled. 
>From 1980 through the early 1990s, Asian enrollment increased at all the 
Ivy  League colleges. It subsequently continued to rise at the schools with 
the  lowest Asian enrollment, Dartmouth and Princeton. Elsewhere, Asian 
enrollment  hit its peak in 1993 for Columbia and Harvard, 1995 for Cornell, 
1996 
for Brown  and Yale, and 2001 for Penn. What’s more, Asian representation at 
all eight of  the Ivies has converged on a narrow range. In the most recent 
five years, the  average percentage of Asians in the eight Ivies has been 
15.7%, and the  difference between the highest and lowest percentage of 
Asians in the eight  Ivies has averaged just 3.7 percentage points. Call it the 
16±2% solution. The  convergence of the Ivies is vividly shown in this 
figure, using Unz’s data. 
 
We can be sure that the reason for the convergence on the 16±2% solution 
does  not reflect a plateau in Asian applications. As Unz notes, America’s 
Asian  population has more than doubled since 1993. In The Power of Privilege,  
Joseph Soares documented that Asians are about twice as likely to apply to 
elite  schools as students from other races. It is certain that the Ivies 
have seen  skyrocketing Asian applications over the last twenty years. Not 
only that, they  have been swamped with more and more superbly qualified Asian 
applicants. A  sampling of the data Unz presents: 
National Merit Scholarship (NMS) semifinalists represent about the top half 
 of one percent of a given state’s scores on the PSAT, the short version of 
the  SAT. In 2010 in Texas, Asians were 3.8% of the population but more 
than a  quarter of all NMS semifinalists; in New York, Asians were 7.3% of the  
population and more than a third of NMS semifinalists; in California, 
Asians  were 11% of the high school students and more than 60% of NMS 
semifinalists.  Nationwide, Unz estimates that 25–30% of NMS semifinalists in 
2010 were 
Asians,  far higher than their enrollment in the Ivies. 
In the US Math Olympiad, Asians have grown from 10% of the winners during 
the  1980s to 58% in the 2000s. In the computing Olympiad, Asians have grown 
from 20%  of the winners in the 1990′s to 50% in 2009–2010 and 75% in 2011–
2012. Among the  Science Talent Search finalists, Asians were 22% of the 
total in the 1980′s, 29%  in the 1990′s, 36% in the 2000′s, and 64% in the 
last two years. 
There’s much more in Unz’s article (and the eight online appendixes that 
go  with it), but consider just these two final comparisons. Caltech is 
acknowledged  to have the most strictly meritocratic admissions criteria in the 
country.  During the same period from the mid 1990′s when the Ivies converged 
on the 16±2%  solution, Asians at Caltech rose from 28% to 39% of the 
student body. If Caltech  is too narrowly science-oriented for you, consider 
the 
comparison between  Stanford, which uses the same “holistic” admissions 
procedures as the Ivies  (“holistic” means considering the whole applicant, 
not merely academic  achievement) and Berkeley, the most elite of California’s 
public universities,  which is required by law to have a transparent set of 
criteria for admission.  Stanford’s Asian enrollment averaged 23% from 1995–
2011. Berkeley’s Asian  enrollment averaged 41% during the same period—
almost double Stanford’s. 
The Ivies would have us believe that their holistic admissions policies 
limit  Asian admissions because Asian applicants tend to be one-dimensional, 
obsessed  with academics to the exclusion of all those wonderful other 
personal  experiences that the Ivies value so highly. I submit that this is 
nonsense. An  abundance of Asian applicants have punched all the right 
extracurricular and  community-service tickets to go along with their 
sensational 
academic  credentials, and there’s no reason to think that Asian young people 
are, 
on  average, any less compassionate, charming, industrious, or otherwise of 
good  character than applicants of other races. 
I propose this challenge to any Ivy League school that denies it has a de  
facto quota for Asian admissions. Let a third party—any number of  highly 
respected research organizations could handle this task—randomly select a  
large sample of applications from which the 2012 entering class was selected.  
Delete all material identifying race or ethnicity. Then, applying the  
criteria and the weighting system that the university claims to be using,  have 
expert judges make simulated admissions decisions. Let’s see what  percentage 
of Asians get in under race-blind conditions. I’m betting 25% at  least, 
with 30–40% as more probable. 
None of the Ivies will take me up on it, of course. The people in their  
admissions offices know that their incoming classes are not supposed to have  “
too many” Asian faces, and part of their job is to make sure that they don’
t. I  just want them to admit publicly what they’re doing, and state their 
rationale,  which presumably goes something like this: The Ivies are not 
supposed to be  strict academic meritocracies. They need students with a 
variety of strengths  and personality types. And even 16% Asian students is 
more 
than three times the  Asian proportion of the American population. 
I don’t have a problem with the need for a student body with diverse  
strengths and personality types. Harvard is a better place because it does not  
select a class consisting exclusively of applicants with perfect SAT scores. 
But  a candid statement of the rationale that has led to the 16±2% solution 
can’t  stop there. It needs to say that apart from the need for a variety of 
strengths  and personality types, the Ivies have decided that they just don’
t want too many  epicanthic folds in their student bodies. Because there’s 
no getting past the  naked fact that students from an ethnic minority are 
now being turned down  because they have the wrong ethnicity. It is exactly 
the same thing that Ivy  League admissions officers did to Jewish applicants 
in the 1920s, when it was  decided that too many Jews were getting into their 
schools. They too had a  rationale for putting a quota on Jews that they 
too believed was justified. What  I don’t understand is this: Why do we all 
accept that what the Ivies did to  limit Jewish enrollment was racist and 
un-American, while what they’re doing to  limit Asian enrollment is not even 
considered  newsworthy?

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