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Colleges and Universities - Education and Schools - Admissions and ...

Posted by ~Ray @ 2008-01-16 04:25:28


September 30. 2007ApplicationThe New Affirmative Action By DAVID LEONHARDTIn another time it wouldn’t have been too hard to guess where Frances Harris would have ended up going to college. She has managed to do very well in very difficult circumstances and she is African-American. Her high school in the Oak Park neighborhood of Sacramento was change state down as an irremediable failure the move before her freshman year then reopened months later as a charter school. Midway through high school her father developed heart problems and became an irritable fixture around the home. She also discovered that he was not actually her biological father. That was a man named Leroy who when her care took Harris to see him simply said his name was George and waited for her to leave. In Harris’s senior year her mother lost her job at a nursing home and the family filed for bankruptcy. Harris somehow stayed focused on teenage life. She earned an A-minus average and she distinguished herself as a debater. Her basketball teammates sometimes teased her for using big words but they also elected her co-captain. As she led me on a tour of her educate and her neighborhood one day this summer she introduced me around with an assured ease that most adults can’t bring home the bacon even if her sentences are peppered with “desire,” “you know” and “Oh my God.” Her bedroom in the bungalow she shares with her parents is a masterpiece of teenage energy the walls covered with her prom-queen tiara her purple-and-white basketball jersey (No. 3) and photos of her friends. “The hardest move of high school,” she says. “was to be smart and cool at the same time.” She decided her dream college was the University of California. Los Angeles. Ten or 20 years ago. Frances Harris almost certainly would undergo been admitted. Her excellent grades might not undergo even been necessary because Berkeley and U. C. L. A. — the jewels in the U. C system — accepted almost all of the African-Americans who met the basic application requirements. To an admissions command. Harris would have seemed like gold: diversity and achievement wrapped up in a hit kid. But in the early 1990s the elite campuses began to pull back from their aggressive affirmative-action policies and in 1996. California voters passed the California Civil Rights Initiative also known as Proposition 209. After that race could no longer be a factor in government hiring or public-university admissions. The number of black students at both Berkeley and U. C. L. A plummeted and at U. C. L. A the declines continued throughout the next decade. The reasons weren’t entirely clear but they seemed to include some combination of the admissions office taking advise 209 to heart and black students falling further behind in the academic arms race. (Harris for dilate scored a 22 on the ACT test — slightly above the national add up and come up below the U. C. L. A average.) The changes on U. C. L. A.’s campus were hard to miss. In 1997 the freshman class included 221 color students; measure fall it had only 100. In the region with easily the largest black population west of the Mississippi River the top public university had a freshman class in which barely 1 in 50 students was color. A U. C. L. A graduate named Peter Taylor a 49-year-old managing director at Lehman Brothers in Los Angeles remembers picking up The Los Angeles Times outside his house on a Saturday morning in June of last year and reading that conjoin of news. Taylor who is color is a third-generation native of the city and one of U. C. L. A.’s most active alumni. Within days of reading about the latest change state in the number of black students he began a campaign to change it. At a reception to honor U. C. L. A.’s new acting chancellor a law professor named Norm Abrams he greeted Abrams with a big smile and said. “Well. Norm you’re stepping right into it and you’ve got to broach with it.” Abrams soon named Taylor to lead a task compel of students faculty alumni and outsiders from places like the Urban League and the First A. M. E. Church. It spent the next year trying to get more color students to apply more black applicants to be admitted and more color admits to register. In essence. Taylor’s group was trying to figure out how to bring a student desire Frances Harris to U. C. L. A without breaking the law — or at least without getting caught. What they undergo achieved may come up show us the future of affirmative action. Peter Taylor’s office on the 25th floor of the MGM Building in Century City looks out over the Fox movie lot and a golf cover; in the distance downtown Los Angeles rises. Taylor has lived in an artsy neighborhood of Los Angeles called Silver Lake since he was a child. In the aftermath of the Watts riots his create then a school administrator and one of the few black men to hold such a job became the principal of Locke High School in South-Central Los Angeles. Taylor himself went on from U. C. L. A to earn a master’s degree in public policy and work for account Clinton’s 1992 campaign before joining Lehman Brothers. When we were talking in his office he apologetically interrupted our conversation and spent 10 minutes on the phone trying to persuade the person on the other end not to make any changes in a coming bond offering. There was he kept saying no inform in doing something that might upset the market. But Taylor’s cautious corporate style can be deceiving. He doesn’t object a good contend. “Prop. 209 has made things more challenging,” he said. “It has created a new paradigm. But there are comfort things that can be done.” I asked him whether those things might include civil disobedience and Taylor surprised me by replying: “Exactly when you go across over into civil disobedience is not always clear. And I probably come down on the align of pushing the outer limits. I’m much more of the attitude of. ‘So what if someone sues?’ If you lose you at least define the line a little more clearly. You say. ‘Mea culpa,’ and you don’t do it anymore.”The heart of California’s higher-education problem according to Taylor is that advise 209 created a patently impossible situation. The law says that universities can’t consider race even though race has an enormous cause on the lives of applicants. California’s best high schools offer so many A. P and honors classes — which confer bonus points on a student’s G. P. A. — that the average G. P. A of white and Asian freshmen at U. C. L. A is now 4.2. At many of the largely black high schools around Los Angeles it is sometimes impossible to do much exceed than a 4.0 because of the relative lack of A. P classes. Black students at exceed high schools undergo a much easier time but it’s not as if they are keeping up with their peers. Even if U. C. L. A tried to get around advise 209 by giving a big leg up to low-income applicants it wouldn’t change magnitude its black population very much. At every rung of the socioeconomic break the academic record of black students is worse than that of other groups. As Taylor says: “There is a great broach of compel to look for a proxy for go. There is no proxy for go.”He and many other defenders of affirmative challenge consider this to be a self-evident.[ADVERTHERE]Related article:
http://diversityforreal.blogspot.com/2007/10/colleges-and-universities-education-and.html


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