The Supreme Court Killed the College-Admissions Essay
Nestled within yesterday's Supreme Court decision declaring that race-conscious admissions programs, like those at Harvard and the University of North Carolina, are unconstitutional is a crucial carveout: Colleges are free to consider "an applicant's discussion of how race affected his or her life." In other words, they can weigh a candidate's race when it is mentioned in an admissions essay. Observers had already speculated about personal essays becoming invaluable tools for candidates who want to express their racial background without checking a box--now it is clear that the end of affirmative action will transform not only how colleges select students, but also how teenagers advertise themselves to colleges. For essays and statements to provide a workaround for pursuing diversity, applicants must first cast themselves as diverse. The American Council on Education, a nonprofit focused on the impacts of public policy on higher education, recently convened a panel dedicated to planning for the demise of affirmative action; admissions directors and consultants emphasized the need "to educate students about how to write about who they are in a very different way," expressing their "full authentic story" and "trials and tribulations."
Jun-30-2023, 19:00:58 GMT
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