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You are here: Home Publications 2003 March Socioeconomic Status, Race/Ethnicity, and Selective College Admissions

Socioeconomic Status, Race/Ethnicity, and Selective College Admissions

Topics: Economics and Inequality, Education  

Mar 30, 2003

Authors: Stephen J. Rose, Anthony P. Carnevale

Publisher(s): The Century Foundation

Type: Book

Seeks to expand the traditional debate over race and ethnicity in admissions to selective colleges by analyzing the issue of whether low-income students should benefit from affirmative action policies. Anthony Carnevale and Stephen Rose conclude that race-sensitive affirmative action policies should be retained and expanded to include low-income students. Under current affirmative action policies, racial minorities are underrepresented, while the under-representation of low-income students is even greater. In fact, preferences for minority students and the economically-disadvantaged have actually fallen off over the past 30 years. On average, top colleges do not provide a systemic preference from, and could in fact admit far greater numbers of, low-income students, including low-income minority students, who could handle the work. To remedy this imbalance, this paper urges the expansion of current affirmative action programs to include low-income students because they can add both economic and racial diversity. Download the PDF.



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