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CRISIS
IN EDUCATION: V
Dividing
the Nation: Affirmative Action
By
Mayra Rodríguez-Valladares
Those
who oppose the way in which the University of Michigan admits
students say that racial preferences or quotas are unfair,
unconstitutional and perpetuate our divisions,
as President Bush recently put it. That is why they have
taken their case all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Those
who support the University of Michigan admissions policies
favor the use of Affirmative Action programs to promote
diversity. They are believers in the benefits of a multi-ethnic,
multi-color student body for the university, its
students, and society as a whole.
The
one thing both sides agree on is the importance raised by
the two cases, Gratz and Grutter vs. the University of Michigans
undergraduate and law schools, respectively. The Supreme
Court will decide whether prospective students may receive
preferential treatment based on ethnicity or racein
other words: whether the university can maintain its Affirmative
Action policy.
But
it is much more. This is the first time in 25 years that
the Court will address the constitutionality of Affirmative
Action in higher education admissions. Its decision will
determine the legality of Affirmative Action at universities
across the country and influence efforts to bring greater
diversity to those campuses.
The
case targets the universitys College of Literature,
Science and the Arts admission criteria, which are based
on a 150-point system that awards students points for certain
accomplishments and/or characteristics. In it, underrepresented
minorities receive 20 extra points toward their total admissions
evaluation, whereas a perfect SAT score only adds 12 points,
as critics are quick to point out.
But Thomas Sáenz, vice president of litigation at
the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund
(MALDEF), defends the system, arguing that Affirmative Action
is essential, because there are still tremendous inequalities
in our nations high schools and middle schools. Affirmative
Action permits colleges to recognize that Latinos and other
minorities often have great potential to
succeedbut unequal opportunity has limited their traditional
credentials.
Most
universities, he says, use standardized test scores and
preferences for children of alumnicriteria that have
a demonstrated racial bias against minorities, and [which]
have little or no connection to likelihood of success in
college. Sáenz believes that so long as such
biased criteria are used, Affirmative Action is a necessary
adjustment mechanism.
The
University of Michigan and those who defend its admission
policies argue its selection process does not use quotas,
as opponents charge. Further, Foster Maer, acting legal
director of the Puerto Rican Legal and Education Defense
Fund (PRLEDF) maintains that the Bush administration
is misstating the issue before the Court. The Michigan case
is not about quotas, nor does the application process exclude
anyone. By casting it in these terms, the Bush administration
is being disingenuous and divisive. Michigans system
is not impossible to administer. Hundreds, if not thousands,
of colleges and universities in the U.S. use formulas like
the Michigan one, with many variations. There is no magic
formula.
Theirs
is a view backed by numerous civil rights organizations
that have filed amicus briefs on behalf of the university.
They include the New Mexico Hispanic Bar Association, the
Black Lawyers Association and the Indian Bar Association.
On the
other side, Linda Chávez, president of The Center
for Equal Opportunity, a non-profit research and educational
organization in Virginia, says that she hopes the Supreme
Court uses the Michigan Grutter and Gratz cases to ban the
use of racial and ethnic preferences in university admissions.
She believes such a ban is essential for the continued
progress of racial relations in the United States. If preferences
are ended, all races will win. If they arent, we will
all lose ... African Americans and Latinos are now being
told that they cannot be expected to succeed unless they
are held to a lower standard than whites and Asians. That
is insulting, and undermines the mutual respect that is
essential in an increasingly multiethnic, multiracial America.
U.S.
Secretary of Education Rod Paige agrees: Admissions
quotas and double standards are not the answer, he
said recently at a National Center for Educational Accountability
conference. He believes that fixing the problem at
the front end, where it can do the most good, is the answer.
The goal of President Bushs No Child Left Behind law,
he says, is to transform American education from a
system that does a good job educating some children to a
system that does a good job educating all children, from
all walks of life.
On one point, both sides of the Affirmative Action debate
agree: Diversity at the college level is a good thing. Americans
overwhelmingly agree that diversity in our schools, neighborhoods,
workplaces and community organizations is enormously positive,
says Gerald Reynolds, assistant secretary for civil rights
at the Department of Education.
Still,
the Bush administration argues that alternatives to existing
affirmative action programs must be developed. Policies
granting preferences on the basis of race and ethnicity
raise constitutional questions and are increasingly being
overturned in the courts, Reynolds says. Further,
voters in various jurisdictions have passed state
and local initiatives restricting the use of racial preferences.
These legal and policy trends mean that we must work together
to look for new solutions.
Maer
disagrees. The Supreme Court has already held that
race can be a legitimate consideration in admissions policies
in its decision on Bakke v. University of California in
the 1970s.
According
to the U.S. Department of Educations report on this
issue, Race-Neutral Alternatives in Postseconday Education:
Innovative Approaches to Diversity, some higher education
institutions are finding ways to provide equal access without
resorting to racial preferences. Many colleges and
universities are investing in nearby elementary and secondary
schools, [recognizing] that helping to better educate young
people who attend traditionally low-performing schools will
broaden the pool of students who can qualify for admission
to college.
Professor
Margaret Montoya, of the University of New Mexico Law School,
has a different perspective. There are no race-neutral
alternatives. Only a limited use of race-conscious criteria
will result in racially diverse student bodies in colleges
and universities, she maintains.
A decision from the Supreme Court is expected this fall.
Just what the court will say is difficult to predict. Everyone
generally believes that four justices will vote to support
the continued consideration of race in admissions, while
four other justices are generally believed to take the opposite
view, says Sáenz.
The
swing justice is Justice Sandra Day OConnor. Her vote
will likely determine the outcome.
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