Close Please enter your Username and Password
Reset Password
If you've forgotten your password, you can enter your email address below. An email will then be sent with a link to set up a new password.
Cancel
Reset Link Sent
Password reset link sent to
Check your email and enter the confirmation code:
Don't see the email?
  • Resend Confirmation Link
  • Start Over
Close
If you have any questions, please contact Customer Service


jpollock 69M
35 posts
3/25/2008 1:08 am
One reason it is more difficult for Asian Student to gain admission to Ivy league schools


Because Asian students may not be legacies or progeny of Ivy league alums it will be more difficult to gain admission. In an article in the San Francisco Chronicle ( “Free tuition is no substitute for dropping legacy admissions”, by Shikha Dalmia, Tuesday, March 18, 2008, page B-7),
“Brown Alumni Magazine reported that legacy applicants are twice as likely as regular applicants to gain admission to Brown University, an Ivy League school. An investigation by the U.S. Office of Civil Rights into Harvard University's admission practices in 1990 reported an identical finding. Nor is there any reason to believe that things have changed at these universities, given that neither has made any move to abandon legacy preferences - although both have announced more generous financial aid. Meanwhile, a 1999 study of the University of Virginia - widely regarded as a public "Ivy" - found that legacy students were 4.3 times more likely to get in over non-legacies with identical academic credentials.
But the most compelling research showing just how lucky born to elite-educated parents are was published in 2005 by Princeton University's Tom Espenshade and Chang Y. Chung. Their analysis of a dozen selected colleges (that they can't identify due to a confidentiality agreement) revealed that on a 1,600-point SAT scale, being the of an alumnus gives the equivalent of 160-point boost to an applicant. By contrast, having nonlegacy Asian American parents represents a 50 SAT-point disadvantage. In other words, these must score 210 points over rich, white legacy offspring to have a shot at admission.
Universities defend legacy preferences on grounds that they help them raise funds from alumni, which they then use to subsidize poor . If this were true, universities most flush with alumni money would also be the most economically diverse. The reverse, actually, is the case. Indeed, according to a 2006 survey by The Chronicle of Higher Education, Harvard, whose $36 billion endowment is the biggest in the country, ranks a dismal 55th out of the top 59 wealthiest private schools on economic diversity. Yale, which at $22 billion sits on the second-biggest endowment, ranks 46th. And Stanford is 24th even though its $17 billion endowment is the third largest.
The reason why economic aid does not equal economic diversity on campus is not hard to understand: Admissions are a zero-sum game in which students vie for a finite number of seats. So every seat that a less-talented legacy gets is one less spot at Stanford available to a talented poor . The crucial determinant of economic diversity on campus is not how much largesse legacies expend on poor - but how many seats they take away from them.
If there is any doubt about this, consider Caltech in Southern California. Its admission standards are the toughest among elite colleges. Its endowment is a "mere" $2.38 billion - yet it ranks an impressive 13th on economic diversity. Its financial aid package is no more generous than that of Stanford or other elite schools. So what's the difference? It applies the same standards to everyone, refusing to give legacies a leg up.”