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Thursday, December 20, 2007
Larry Elder :: Townhall.com Columnist
How To Make an Un-Level Playing Field More Un-Level
by Larry Elder
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Are Barack Obama's friends -- like Bill Ayers -- legitimate political issues?

Move over, Martin Luther King Jr., and your desire for a colorblind society. The University of California system prefers a color-coordinated one.

UC's Board of Admissions and Relations with Schools (BOARS) wants to change the admission rules to their 10 schools, including lowering the minimum high school GPA to 2.8 and removing the requirement of two SAT Subject Tests.

Current policy makes the top 12.5 percent of each senior class -- based on a minimum 3.0 GPA, their scores on either the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing, and their scores on two SAT Subject Tests -- eligible for admission to a UC school.

But, a large percentage of poor, black and Hispanic students, according to BOARS, never take the SAT Subject Tests, shutting them out from eligibility. Lowering the GPA and dropping the requirement for two SAT Subject Tests increases the number of students eligible for admission, giving the universities a larger, more minority-laden pool from which to choose.

Yet this proposed policy adversely affects students, many of them Asian American students (formerly known as minorities). And doing away with the SAT Subject Tests -- where students pick their two best subjects from a variety of tests in English, history, mathematics, science and language -- inflicts the most damage.

Used since 1926, with revisions over the decades, SATs try to make sense out of different grades, given by different teachers, in different classes, in different schools. How do we know the A given by Mr. Anderson in Texas equals the A given in another class by Mrs. Tyler in New Hampshire? Answer: The SAT. As for the SAT Subject Tests (called Achievement Tests until 1994, and SAT IIs until 2005), each subject has a one-hour test, and a student can take up to three Subject Tests in one day.

Critics of the SAT argue that grades remain the best predictor of success in college. Agreed, provided we take into consideration grade inflation or watered-down standards -- precisely why most colleges, despite no government mandate, still require that applicants take the SAT.

Admitting students with lowered standards hurts the very kids that race-coordinators claim to protect. In a groundbreaking study UCLA Professor Richard Sander -- a longtime affirmative action advocate -- found that law school minority students admitted with lower criteria suffered from this "academic mismatch." After the first year of law school, 51 percent of black students were likely to be in the bottom tenth of their class, compared with 5 percent of whites. These mismatched students were twice as likely to drop out or fail the bar on their first try. Sander concluded that if schools and students were better matched, we'd have many more black lawyers.

A student entering school without preferences stands a far greater chance of competing and succeeding. Why? Preferences place a student on a much faster track. A less-competitive track provides the less-prepared student time to grasp the material, making on-time graduation more likely. Continued...

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About The Author
Larry Elder is host of the Larry Elder Show on talk radio and author of Showdown : Confronting Bias, Lies, and the Special Interests That Divide America .
 
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Subject: Fletch
Your Patience is amazing!

With respect to "..the have and have nots", I perfer the summary "The did and the did nots". It's both descriptive and prescriptive. Did you finish the home work? Did you graduate from High School? Did you take a course of study with real world application? Did you have (make) babies before marrage? Have you stayed married? etc. etc.

This, of course, does not address the sorry state of public education, but that's another book.


You caught me
Yes, it's 2003.

The statement from the court ruling, however, since the "interest" specified in that parageaph was ultimately the only one to survive the legal challenge, it, in fact, says EXACTLY what I said it does.

On the latter issue, it's really quite simple. The positions being taken by those who do not otherwise meet the minimum admission standards account for no more than 15% of the student body. But the funding that results from such admissions (whether through athletic programs or through donations/endowments) accounts for more than half (frequently well over half) of the institutional funding. You cannot possibly provide a logically supported argument or an economically sound analysis by which the elimination of more than half of the funding stream results in the elimination of less than 15% of the educational opportunities provided by such institutions. There simply is no supply curve in existence for ANY product that would be so nearly vertical as to yield such a result (and I've been performing such analysis for the last couple of decades).

I state that a circumstance in which the abandonment of the current system in favor of one that does not accomodate such market-related admissions would yield fewer academic opportunities for other students than currently exist today for the same reason that a physicist doesn't have to throw a brick off the top of a building to predict that it will fall - as an economist, I rely on models of human and market behavior that have been demonstrated to be indicative of actual conditions by repeated real world experiences.

I concede that the debate has become unproductive at this point however and will remain so as long as you remain in denial.

Farewell.
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