Adrienne Oddi , vice president of strategic enrollment and communications at Queens University in Charlotte, meets with her admissions team on June 18. When the Supreme Court overturned race-conscious college admissions last June, Adrienne Oddi and other administrators at Queens University paused their Board of Trustees meeting to acknowledge that their world was entering a new era.
While the changes at colleges like Harvard have been dramatic, the principle of race-neutrality is being felt more subtly at universities like Queens that accept more applicants than they turn away. Oddi said the ruling brought more of an “emotional shift than a practical shift” to her office and described how she blinds herself to a student’s race if the student mentions it in an application essay.
A study by the Common App, a nonprofit whose application is used by more than 1,000 member colleges, found no major changes in the racial and ethnic composition of its applicant pool in the 2023-2024 admissions season. Nor did it see significant deviations from previous trends in how students self-identify their race and ethnicity on the form, or how students write about race and ethnicity in their essays.
Still, some experts contend schools can maintain diversity without affirmative action through strategies such as increasing financial aid for students from low-income families, investing in pipeline programs, intensifying recruitment and efforts like fly-ins that bring prospective students to campus. But those initiatives are more expensive.
“It’s hard to overstate the sea-change effect that occurred and is, frankly, still occurring, because now there’s a second- and third-generation set of questions emerging,” said Art Coleman, managing partner and co-founder of Education Counsel, which is guiding universities as they seek to comply with the Supreme Court decision.
Source: Law Daily Report (lawdailyreport.net)
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