Earlier
this month, a $25m fraud
scheme
which helped children of wealthy parents cheat their way into top
American universities was unearthed by US prosecutors. As part of the
investigation into the scheme, dozens of well-to-do parents,
including Hollywood celebrities, have since been indicted for paying
millions of dollars in bribes, arranging to falsify their children's
college entrance exam scores, and misrepresenting their athletic
abilities to secure admission to elite universities by fraudulent
means.
The
revelations caused shock and outrage across the world, but they
should not have. The scandal revealed nothing new. One of the
worst-kept secrets of American education
is that it is a rigged system. The deck is stacked in favour of the
wealthy, who can buy the best education possible for their children,
and at the expense of those without means, power or privilege.
Education
in the US is a heavily privatised, for-profit scheme that excludes
low-income people and members of disadvantaged racial groups, and
only reinforces the existing socioeconomic inequities.
We
all pretend the higher education system in the United States is based
on meritocracy. American mythology dictates that in the land of
opportunity, all people can pull themselves up by their bootstraps,
work hard and achieve the American dream. Yet, what can one possibly
do if he or she was born without boots? Those fortunate individuals
who inherit resources, wealth, social capital and pedigree
accumulated over generations enjoy a distinctly unfair advantage over
poor students, who must work while studying or take out exorbitant
amounts of loans to pay for fees.
The
US is witnessing a student debt crisis with a record $1.53
trillion
in outstanding debt - a figure which has more than doubled since the
end of the 2009 recession, and exceeds the nation's one
trillion dollars in credit card debt.
As a result, young people are saddled with a fortune in debt they are
unable to pay off with low-paying or non-existent jobs, forced for
years to forego buying a house, getting married or starting a family.
Wealthy
students benefit from privilege compounded by more privilege,
crowding out the rest from university spots. Many universities give
preferences to legacy admits, students with at least one parent who
graduated from the institution - a policy that overwhelmingly
benefits privileged, white candidates.
Harvard,
my alma mater, accepts 34
percent
of legacy applicants, as opposed to six percent of non-legacy
applicants, a nearly six-fold advantage. While over
one-fifth
of white admits to Harvard were legacies in recent years, only 4.8
percent of black admitted students, seven percent of Latinx students
and 6.6 percent of Asian students were legacies, with the total
number of white legacies surpassing all legacies of colour combined.
Some 14
percent
of Harvard's class of 2022 are children of alumni, and over 29
percent have family ties to the school. Legacies are a significant
portion of other university classes such as Yale (11 percent),
Princeton (14 percent), the University of Southern California (16
percent), and the University of Notre Dame (22 percent).
Despite
the ubiquity of legacy admissions, opponents of diversity and
inclusion programmes in higher education focus instead on affirmative
action for underrepresented students of colour. Students
for Fair Admissions
has waged a lawsuit against Harvard's affirmative action programme on
the grounds that it advantages black and Latinx students at the
expense of Asian-American students.
Racial
justice advocates argue that a cynical game of pitting various
non-white groups against each other and positioning Asians as more
deserving than other brown or black students will only benefit
existing systems of white privilege. In 2017, for the first time in
its 400-year history Harvard admitted a majority non-white class, and
perhaps, that is part of the problem for some.
Increased
economic
inequality
in America only exacerbates the economic segregation of schools and
dims the prospects of success for low-income children, who are
funnelled into under-resourced two-year community colleges rather
than competitive four-year colleges.
Public
primary and secondary education in the US depends substantially on
property taxes for about one-third of its funding. Consequently,
wealthier white enclaves have $23bn
more
in resources to devote to their schools, and are able to carve out
their own racially exclusive school districts. Poor
disproportionately black and brown communities are underfunded,
particularly if states do not intervene to rectify the imbalance
among school districts.
As
a report published by Brookings
Institution
has noted: "Segregated housing and schools, gerrymandered
districts and voter suppression picked up where Jim Crow left off.
Housing ghettos are born of racist housing policies that rob the
black community of opportunities to amass wealth." In 2011, a
black mother was imprisoned
for falsifying her daughter's address to allow her to attend an
affluent, predominantly white school
Elite
education creates an inherent tension between meritocracy and equal
opportunity and Stuyvesant High School, the most exclusive of the
eight specialised public high schools in New York City, is a good
illustration of this phenomenon.
Earlier
this month, the school announced its admissions for the next school
year; it admitted only seven
black students
out of 895. Black students are one percent of the school population,
with Latinx students at three percent, whites at 20 percent and Asian
students at 73 percent, in a city in which black and Latinx students
are 70 percent.
At
issue is the Specialized High School Admission Test (SHSAT), an
entrance
examination
which is the sole criterion for admission, which some students
prepare for months or years, sometimes hiring tutors to gain an
advantage. The exam contains material that is not taught in schools,
raising questions regarding its validity and calls to reform the
admissions process and eliminate or change the test.
High-stakes
standardised testing in the US has its origins in racial bias. A
century ago, the eugenics movement, which wanted to uphold the
superiority of the white race were concerned the "infiltration"
of inferior non-white people, "Negroes", Southern and
Eastern Europeans, Jews and others would dilute the superior genetic
intelligence of the Anglo-Saxon stock. They developed IQ tests to
maintain the existing racial and class hierarchy.
Psychologist
Carl Bingham was very much influenced by these ideas when he
helpeddevelop the Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT), the leading college
entrance exam in the US. The SAT is an exam that, according to
critics, does not predict college success or determine merit,
contains questions that advantage white students, and is designed to
create
inequality
and profit the testing industry.
It
is ironic, or perhaps fitting, that rich white parents paid bribes to
cheat on a test already designed to favour their children, while the
SAT score of a black Florida student was invalidated recently for
being too
high.
The
Trump administration - supported by many adherents to the white
supremacist conspiracy theory that whites are threatened with
extinction due to an assault by inferior people of colour through
immigration, affirmative action and demographic changes - is in
favour of ending affirmative action and has eliminated Obama-era
measures promoting diversity in education.
President
Donald Trump has presided over the undermining of the US education
system through the gutting of civil rights protections, the
underfunding of public education, and the facilitation of the
economic exploitation of students by education profiteers. The
president's 2019 budget would cut the Department of Education budget
by $7.1bn
and eliminate 29
programmes
such as afterschool and summer school for low-income children,
bringing even more entrenchment to America's unequal education along
racial and socioeconomic lines.
African
American parents have always told their children they must work twice
as hard to get half as much. The problem is that with the current
state of regressive politics in the US, our children's children will
likely have to hear the same words, unless we take urgent action.
As
Drake University Law Professor Vinay Harpalani told me in a recent
conversation with me on the topic of education: "As practiced in
America today, meritocracy is largely hypocrisy. This hypocrisy is a
product of elitism itself: the need to create very stark status
differences. We need to think very critically about our notions not
only meritocracy, but also of equal opportunity. Perhaps the most
effective way to create equal opportunity is to address America's
obsession with status - an obsession which actually values inequality
and justifies it under the guise of meritocracy and equal
opportunity."
This
commentary was originally published by Aljazeera.com
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