Culture MIT's Drop in Black Students Shows Fallout From Top Court Ruling - The enrollment numbers give an early indication of how US colleges are grappling with a Supreme Court decision that banned race as a factor in admissions.

1724272488580.png

The share of Black students in the incoming class at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology plummeted after the Supreme Court effectively banned considering race as a factor in undergraduate admissions last year.

The university said Wednesday the class of 2028 is 5% Black, down from an average of 13% in recent years. The share of Hispanic students in the class is 11%, down from 15%, MIT said.

Meanwhile, Asian Americans will make up 47% of MIT's incoming class, up from 41%. Students for Fair Admissions, the group that brought the Supreme Court case against Harvard and the University of North Carolina that led to the ruling against affirmative action, had argued that the schools penalized Asian Americans during the admissions process.

MIT’s numbers indicate how last year's Supreme Court ruling is posing a challenge for universities to meet their diversity goals. Considering race in admissions has long been controversial. Schools have argued that it helps them build diverse student bodies, while detractors contend the policies unfairly discriminated against Asian and White students. A Pew Research Center survey published last June showed half of adults say race and ethnicity should not be a factor in admissions decisions at selective colleges, while one-third approved.

In recent years, around 25% of enrolling undergraduate students at MIT have identified as Black, Hispanic, and/or Native American and Pacific Islander. For the incoming class of 2028, that number is about 16%. The percentage of White students was little changed at 37%.

The Supreme Court’s decision sent shockwaves through the world of higher education, forcing administrators to plot new strategies to meet diversity goals. Stu Schmill, MIT’s dean of admissions, said in a blog post that the school had expanded recruitment efforts and financial aid initiatives in a bid to “improve access to students from all backgrounds.”

“If MIT cannot find a way to continue to draw on the full range of human talent and experience in the future, it may threaten the qualitative strength of the MIT education, both by a relative reduction in the educational benefits of diversity and by making our community less attractive to the best students from all backgrounds,” Schmill said.

Corporate Backlash​

While the court’s decision applied to college admissions, the backlash against affirmative action has spread to corporate America, with a series of lawsuits and employment complaints putting diversity, equity and inclusion policies under the microscope too.

Over the past year or so, business leaders across corporate America have become increasingly cautious about promoting their DEI initiatives publicly, some striking references to terms such as “anti-racist,” “unconscious bias” and “mandatory allyship” from regulatory filings.

The changes were made as conservative groups mounted legal attacks and prominent businesspeople from Bill Ackman to Elon Musk added to an intensifying backlash against DEI policies. Even so, US companies say they remain committed to workforce diversity, and a majority of Americans continue to support DEI programs, with a Washington Post-Ipsos poll in April finding 61% of adults think DEI programs in the workplace are “a good thing.”

It’s also clear that MIT thinks it has work to do as it tries to meet diversity goals.

“Now that the class of 2028 has enrolled, the impact is clear, and it is concerning,” Sally Kornbluth, the school’s president, said in a statement.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...n-black-student-enrollment-for-incoming-class (Archive)
 
1724272488580.png

The share of Black students in the incoming class at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology plummeted after the Supreme Court effectively banned considering race as a factor in undergraduate admissions last year
Why aren't either of the percentages adding up to 100? The first one is 110% and the second one is 101%, how does that work?
 
White enrollment drops 1%

But they won't shut up about how whitey is to blame.
Asian admission went up 6% while all other minority admissions dropped by 14% total. White admission dropped by 1%.
It appears that only Whites were smart enough to recognize that undergrad education is the same everywhere and that “elite” schools are a waste of money.
 
No fucks given. You admit those with the most potential to succeed. You need to admit those with the greatest potential to succeed, without worrying about race or gender.

Suggest the number that means the most is the percentage of students admitted who actually get the bachelor's degree within four years. To me, that's the school's success rate.
 
Huh, looks like almost two thirds of the niggos admitted to MIT weren't really qualified. Well, we can give them a better shot at admission - just end the unlimited student visas we hand out every year and force American universities to serve American students. It's only fair to those poor, oppressed niggos that they not have to get sidelined by the Chinese, right?

Right, libtards?
 
Wow, I’m so shocked. Wow, how could this be?

I have a kid applying for college right now, and was planning on telling her to check the “other” or “mixed” box instead of Asian because I was worried she’d be turned down because of it.

SMH, blacks getting preferred treatment that doesn’t hold up against talent and intelligence. Good.
 
It’s kind of weird that it went down

black people are 13% of the population. So like 45 million of them. Even if only .1% were MIT material, that’s still plenty of them.
or are blacks in such a bad state not even 1 out of 1000 are MIT material and without the scales tipping the attendance drops.
 
“If MIT cannot find a way to continue to draw on the full range of human talent and experience in the future, it may threaten the qualitative strength of the MIT education, both by a relative reduction in the educational benefits of diversity and by making our community less attractive to the best students from all backgrounds,” Schmill said.
It's up to your recruiters to find qualified talent. Having a different skin color is not a talent. If you buy into the idea that black communities are disadvantaged in early childhood education, use some of the money your school has to create grants/scholarships for muh programs for the kids. (It won't actually work and will just be a grift)
 
It’s kind of weird that it went down

black people are 13% of the population. So like 45 million of them. Even if only .1% were MIT material, that’s still plenty of them.
or are blacks in such a bad state not even 1 out of 1000 are MIT material and without the scales tipping the attendance drops.
Half that they are stupid half that, if a university drops the quotas, and you don't actually care for the career, it is far easier to just apply to the university that has the quotas in place
 
  • Like
Reactions: LurkTrawl
Back