Perspective: I was a first-generation college student at an elite college. The admissions scandal reopens old wounds.
Stanford University was among the elite colleges enmeshed in the admissions scandal. By Anthony Abraham Jack Anthony Abraham Jack, assistant professor at the Harvard Graduate School of Education, is author of"The Privileged Poor: How Elite Colleges are Failing Disadvantaged Students." March 18 at 10:42 AM The college admissions scandal that was exposed last week makes clear what so many of us already know: The much-lauded American meritocracy is a lie.
In 2011, in a ritual that has been repeated on numerous campuses, a Republican group at the University of California held an “affirmative action bake sale,” charging white men $2 for a cupcake, Latinos $1 and African Americans 75 cents. This was supposed to highlight the incredibly unfair treatment of white men wherever affirmative action existed.
For example, Stacy, who attended a distressed public school in Nevada, eventually attended a prestigious private university in the Northeast. She had left her abusive mother in her junior year of high school and was in foster care when she applied to college. She lacked Internet access at the group home, and so, resourceful and determined, she would copy and paste college application questions from a computer at school into a Word document.
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
First lawsuits filed by students at elite schools in wake of college admissions scandalThe first lawsuits targeting elite universities and individuals charged by federal prosecutors in a sweeping college admissions scandal were filed by students and a parent in California.
Read more »
Lawsuits filed by students at elite schools in wake of college admissions scandalThe first lawsuits targeting elite universities and individuals charged by federal prosecutors in a sweeping college admissions scandal were filed by a student and parent in California.
Read more »
Admissions scandal reinforces stereotypes but elite colleges admitting more low-income studentsOfficials at many leading private colleges and universities say they are working harder than they ever have before to seek out, recruit, enroll and support high-achieving, low-income students. By TeresaWatanabe :
Read more »
2 Stanford students file first class action suit in largest-ever college admissions scandalThe University of Southern California, Yale University, the University of California Los Angeles and other colleges were sued by two Stanford University students seeking class status over the admissions-bribery scandal
Read more »
2 Stanford students file first class action suit in largest-ever college admissions scandalThe University of Southern California, Yale University, the University of California Los Angeles and other colleges were sued by two Stanford University students seeking class status over the admissions-bribery scandal
Read more »
The College Admissions Scam: A Sleazy Side-Effect Of Our Elite College ManiaThe federal indictment of dozens of individuals for involvement in a college admissions conspiracy reveals the lengths to which some parents will go to gain their children's admission to an elite college. This desperate desire ignores evidence about what aspects of a college education matter most.
Read more »
College admissions scandal: Does attending an elite school mean you'll earn more money?The college admissions scandal comes down to money. Graduating from elite schools translates into better jobs and higher salaries, most people think.
Read more »
The Irony Of The Elite College Admission Bribery ScandalThe irony of the elite college admissions bribery scandal is that getting admitted into an elite school through dishonest means won't help you earn more money. Research has produced surprising findings on what really matters.
Read more »
College admissions scandal: Does attending an elite school mean you'll earn more money?The bloodsport of gaining admission to a high-ranking college goes beyond prestige and car-window stickers, a.k.a. bragging rights. It comes down to one word – money.
Read more »