ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 7月6日 02時22分


Race-conscious admissions helped only a tiny fraction of Black and Hispanic students. For “unseen” students in the affirmative action debate, it could not address the many obstacles to a college degree.

The Supreme Court’s decision striking down affirmative action will very likely have powerful consequences for elite college admissions, potentially limiting the pool of Black and Hispanic students at the most selective universities and affecting the diversity of future leaders in business, government and beyond. But the effect of race-conscious admissions was always limited to a relatively small number of students. For a vast majority, these schools are not an option — academically or financially.

Many head straight into the work force after high school or attend less selective universities that do not weigh race and ethnicity in admissions. At least a third of all undergraduate students — including half of Hispanic undergraduates — attend community colleges, which typically allow open enrollment. “This is the unseen group,” said Josh Tovar, the principal at Memorial Pathway Academy, a high school for at-risk students and new immigrants in Garland, Texas. “Everyone sees the kid that is No. 1 ranked with 110 GPA going to MIT. No one sees my boy that doesn’t have parents — that lives with Grandma, that came to me at 17, with five credits, and graduates.”

Tap the link in our bio to read more about these unseen students. Photos by @mary.kang, @marshallscheuttle and @etl_photo


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