Federal officials investigate UVA Admission policies
Sunday, January 16, 2005 at 07:40PM
TheSpook
Haters Believe TOO many Blacks & Latinos in College
For the first time ever, the U.S. Department of
Education is investigating complaints that some universities have taken
race-conscious admission policies too far. The department's Office for
Civil Rights is currently looking at a complaint made against the
University of Virginia. This investigation into UVA's race-conscious
admissions policy marks the first time the federal government has
investigated undergraduate admissions procedures at state universities
since the U.S. Supreme Court ruled on the University's admissions
policies in June 2003. Until now, the Office for Civil Rights has
focused on discrimination within scholarship programs, not admissions
policies. In May 2003, the father of a UVA applicant claimed his white
son had been discriminated against and was denied admission because the
school was aiming for a more racially diverse student body. When UVA
did not respond to his complaints, he turned to the DOE, The Chronicle
of Higher Education reported. Spokespersons for UVA said they would not
comment on a pending case. UVA is not the only school to come under
recent scrutiny for its race-conscious policies. OCR has been asked to
look into accusations against North Carolina State University, the
University of Maryland--Baltimore's School of Medicine and the law
school at the College of William and Mary. All representatives for the
universities declined to comment because the cases are controversial
and pending. Despite the efforts of those opposed to race-conscious
admissions, many colleges have opted to take race into account in order
to boost the number of minorities they admit. In 2002, 45.9 percent of
whites between the ages of 18 and 21 were in college compared to 37.6
percent of blacks and 24.9 percent of Hispanics, according to the U.S.
Census Bureau. [more]
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
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