[Antiracism] FYI Colleges being forced to open minority student assistance to whites
KATHLEEN ANDERSON
ANDERSOK at ARPS.ORG
Fri Mar 24 09:36:35 EST 2006
Colleges Open Minority Aid To All Comers
Copyright New York Times Company Mar 14, 2006
Facing threats of litigation and pressure from Washington, colleges and
universities nationwide are opening to white students hundreds of
thousands of dollars in fellowships, scholarships and other programs
previously created for minorities.
Southern Illinois University reached a consent decree last month with
the Justice Department to allow nonminorities and men access to graduate
fellowships originally created for minorities and women.
In January, the State University of New York made white students
eligible for $6.8 million of aid in two scholarship programs also
previously available just for minorities. Pepperdine University is
negotiating with the Education Department over its use of race as a
criterion in its programs.
''They're all trying to minimize their legal exposure,'' Susan Sturm, a
law professor at Columbia University, said about colleges and
universities. ''The question is how are they doing that, and are they
doing that in a way that's going to shut down any effort or any
successful effort to diversify the student body?''
The institutions are reacting to two 2003 Supreme Court cases on using
race in admissions at the University of Michigan. Although the cases did
not ban using race in admissions to higher education, they did leave the
state of the law unclear, and with the changing composition of the
court, some university and college officials fear legal challenges.
The affected areas include programs for high schools and graduate
fellowships.
It is far too early to determine the effects of the changes on the
presence of minorities in higher education and how far the pool of money
for scholarships and similar programs will stretch.
Firm data on how many institutions have modified their policies is
elusive because colleges and institutions are not eager to trumpet the
changes. At least a handful are seeking to put more money into the
programs as they expand the possible pool of applicants.
Some white students are qualifying for the aid. Last year, in response
to a legal threat from the Education Department, Washington University
in St. Louis modified the standards for an undergraduate scholarship
that had been open just to minorities and was named for the first
African-American dean at the university. This year, the first since the
change, 12 of the 42 first-year recipients are white.
Officials at conservative groups that are pushing for the changes see
the shift as a sign of success in eliminating race as a factor in
decision making in higher education.
''Our concern is that the law be followed and that nobody be denied
participation in a program on account of skin color or what country
their ancestors came from,'' said Roger Clegg, president and general
counsel of the Center for Equal Opportunity, which has been pressing
institutions on the issue.
''We're not looking at achieving a particular racial outcome,'' Mr.
Clegg added. ''And it's unfortunate that some organizations seem to view
the success or failure of the program based simply on what percentage of
students of this color or that color can participate.''
Advocates of focused scholarships programs like Theodore M. Shaw,
president of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund Inc.,
challenge the notion that programs for minority students hurt whites.
''How is it that they conclude that the great evil in this country is
discrimination against white people?'' Mr. Shaw asked. ''Can I put that
question any more pointedly? I struggle to find the words to do it
because it's so stunning.''
Mr. Shaw said protecting scholarships and other programs for minorities
was ''at the top of our agenda.''
Travis Reindl, director of state policy analysis at the American
Association of State Colleges and Universities, said hundreds, if not
thousands, of scholarship and fellowship programs historically used race
as a criterion. Mr. Reindl estimated that as many as half of the
four-year colleges in the United States had reviewed or modified such
programs.
Neither the Justice Department nor Education Department, nor
organizations on all sides of the discussions over affirmative action,
have gathered statistics tracking the trend. In January, The Chronicle
of Higher Education named more than 12 institutions that had made the
changes.
Mr. Clegg said that since 2003 his center had sent 200 challenges to
colleges and universities over race-based scholarships and other
programs, warning of legal action if changes were not made. He said more
than 150 institutions had broadened their programs in response.
The two Supreme Court affirmative action decisions that are worrying
the institutions involved the University of Michigan. In Grutter v.
Bollinger, the court upheld the use of race in admissions decisions at
the law school. It found that there had been a ''highly individualized,
holistic review of each applicant's file'' in which race could be
properly considered.
In Gratz v. Bollinger, the court struck down the use of race in
undergraduate admissions, finding that those applications used a scoring
system that should not have awarded points based on race.
''When the Gratz and Grutter decisions came down, that was really kind
of a mixed bag,'' Mr. Reindl said. ''It's still a very murky
environment, and it's also a very contentious environment.''
The effects of the decisions, in June 2003, were almost immediate.
After the summer of 2003, Princeton closed a seven-week program for
minority high school juniors. Begun in 1985, it focused on strengthening
skills in economics, statistics and other areas. Princeton restarted the
program, the Woodrow Wilson School Junior Summer Institute, last summer.
Now it is open to all students showing an interest in public service and
commitment to ''cross-cultural issues.''
Changes have also come at institutions like St. Louis University, which
widened a scholarship program for blacks in 2004 to include all students
and named it after the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
Three years ago, Williams College opened a graduate fellowship and a
prefreshman program to all races. Officials at several institutions and
scholars emphasized that scholarships and fellowships open to all
students could, if thoughtfully created, still achieve diversity in
classrooms and on faculties.
''The objective is still to make good kids excellent,'' said William F.
Elliott, vice president for enrollment at Carnegie Mellon University,
which three years ago broadened a full-tuition scholarship for minority
students and a summer program in mathematics and science for minority
high school students.
Now, the university also considers diversity to include other factors
like whether students are the first in their families to attend
college.
A big question is how far the money can stretch. At SUNY, officials
have requested additional New York State money for the two modified
fellowships, the Empire State Minority Honors Scholarship Program, which
distributes $649,000 a year to 898 students, and the Underrepresented
Graduate Fellowship Program, which distributes $6.2 million in financial
aid to 500.
More money would make it possible, said Peter D. Salins, provost of the
SUNY system, to offer more fellowships and help offset any potential
adverse effects on minority students.
''All over America, universities are adjusting their policies, and this
is simply our instance'' of doing so, Mr. Salins said. At Southern
Illinois in Carbondale, the modifications in the consent decree affect
three graduate fellowships involving 85 students that offered tuition
plus stipends. At Washington University in St. Louis, which modified the
undergraduate fellowship named for the former black dean, John P. Ervin,
officials said they remained committed to increasing diversity. ''In
some ways, this makes our objectives more difficult,'' said James E.
McLeod, director of the scholarship program and dean of the college of
arts and sciences at the university. ''It will take more time, it will
take more creativity.''
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