USA Today: Let Alma Maters Decide
Schools Should Determine Whether Children of Alumni Get an Edge
A fair number of freshmen arriving at their colleges this week are legacies,
a term that sounds faintly disreputable. Aren't these the students who
get into top-tier colleges because their parents went there and donate
heavily?
That's what the critics of admission preferences for children of alumni say, and those critics got a boost from research released earlier this month.
A paper
by a Duke University sociology professor and a graduate student
concluded that legacy students entered Duke with lower grades and had
poorer grades the first year (before recovering). Not only did the Duke
legacy students earn lower grades initially, they were more likely to
be wealthy, white, Protestant graduates of private schools.
The study is bound to fire up anti-legacy campaigns. On Capitol Hill
in recent years, some senators have threatened colleges with reporting requirements on legacy students or, worse yet, sought to revoke tax exemptions for gifts made by legacy parents.
The motives of the anti-legacy advocates are understandable, and if
a college decides on its own not to give extra points to legacy
applicants, more power to it. But bans on legacy advantages could
trigger unintended consequences:
Reduced Diversity
Once government starts tinkering with the admissions process, there's
no stopping it. If preferences for legacies are barred, so might those
for minorities, athletes, tuba players or modern dancers. Colleges, not
legislators, should determine their optimal mix of students, one that
isn't necessarily based solely on grades and SAT scores.
Revenue Drops
States
are dotted with regional colleges with limited national pull. These
colleges lack the deep pockets afforded by the multibillion-dollar
endowments found at elite universities. Encouraging the children of
alumni, including alums who are steady givers, is an economic
necessity. Denying colleges those donations would inflict serious
financial damage.
Limited Loyalty
Colleges like legacy students for the same reason they like "early
decision" applicants who list a college as their top choice and promise
to attend if accepted. Students who really want to be at a college add
spirit, carry on traditions and get involved in activities that benefit
all students.
To date, only a few public universities have banned legacy
advantages. At elite private colleges, legacy students make up as much
as 12% of the freshman classes, although most legacies get only a
modest edge and intense competition for admission makes getting in far
tougher than it used to be. (Satirist Andy Borowitz suggests
a LegacyPlus program to allow rejected Harvard legacies to "enjoy all
of the perks of students who actually got into Harvard — except for the
education part.")
At lesser-known colleges, which are worried about their economic
survival, legacy admissions appear to be rising, say college
counselors, and might make up as much as 30% of the freshman class.
It's easy to appreciate the unease about legacy admissions. But
depriving colleges of the ability to shape their freshman classes as
they see fit, as long as they abide by anti-discrimination laws,
amounts to denial of an important academic freedom.
***
Michael Dannenberg: Ban Legacy Preferences*
Practice Gives an Unfair Advantage to Less Qualified Children of Alumni
There is no good argument for a legacy preference
in college admissions. Legacies are less qualified and perform less
well academically than their non-legacy peers. The preference is
inefficient for fundraising, and it undermines the role of colleges as
engines of socioeconomic opportunity. Schools should do away with it
voluntarily, or Congress should ban it just like discrimination against
racial minorities.
At
elite institutions, typically one in eight students is a legacy. In
many schools, there are more legacies than African Americans, Latinos
or Pell Grant
recipients. Notre Dame, where one in four students gets a legacy
preference, has more legacies than African-Americans and Latinos
combined.
Harvard's legacy admission rate is 40%. Yet according to the Education Department Office for Civil Rights, legacies on average are "significantly less qualified" than their peers.
Elite colleges — with endowments such as Notre Dame's $6 billion and Harvard's $35 billion
— claim the preference is "necessary" for fundraising. But students get
a legacy preference even if their families haven't contributed a dime.
From a fundraising standpoint, it would be fairer and more efficient to
auction off acceptance letters on eBay than to give a legacy preference.
Colleges such as Yale
claim the preference furthers a sense of tradition. That's the same
argument used to exclude racial minorities, women and Jews a generation
ago, not to mention justify racial segregation nationally.
Defenders such as USA TODAY hide behind the concept of "academic
freedom." But academic freedom has to do with research and what goes on
inside the classroom — it's not a blank check for discriminatory
admissions policies. It's not as if legacies have an important
perspective or special talent that contributes to the intellectual or
cultural environment of a school.
The legacy preference doesn't reward achievement, doesn't promote
diversity and isn't fair. It should be banned. The last thing colleges
and universities should be doing is extending an extra helping hand to
those already advantaged by birth.
*Reprint includes correction regarding the number of legacies at Notre Dame University