As a product of the University of California – Go Aggies! – I will tell you from first hand that the UC demographic is all Asian. As it stands, having four- to five-times the amount of Asians represented in California’s premier school system isn’t necessarily a bad thing. But the breakdown is certainly telling in terms of where balance is needed. In a state funded education system where Asians make up only 12.4% of California’s population, Asians make up 40% of the university’s student body.
To address the imbalance, UC regents have decided to relax admission standards in order to expand the UC applicant pool.
As it stands, Fall 2008 admissions data from UC schools indicate the following breakdown:
University of California, Berkeley
- Asian-American: 46%
- White: 30.2%
- Latino: 11.5%
- African-American: 3.7%
University of California, Los Angeles
- Asian-American: 38%
- White: 34%
- Latino: 15%
- African-American: 3%
University of California, Davis
- Asian-American: 42%
- White: 36%
- Latino: 12%
- African-American: 3%
University of California, Irvine
- Asian-American: 51%
- White: 24%
- Latino: 12%
- African-American: 2%
University of California, Santa Barbara
- Asian-American: 19%
- White: 53%
- Latino: 19%
- African-American: 3%
Effective in 2012, UC Regents have changed the admissions requirements and process to drop the SAT subject test (SAT II) and to extend automatic admissions to the 91st percentile of California high school students.
Applicants are currently required to maintain a certain GPA and SAT composite score that combines SAT and SAT II scores in order to qualify for UC. The new requirements will lax the current standards. But UC estimates the new changes would qualify 1,800 more black, 7,500 more Latinos, 15,000 more whites, and 4,000 Asian-American students.
Although the test is aimed to increase UC’s applicant pool, Asian- and African-American students benefit the least. Especially since Asian-Americans perform better on the soon-to-be dropped SAT II subject test and other minority and white students perform better on the SAT (I) reasoning test, Asian American political pundits suggest the new requirements will greatly reduce the number of Asian Americans in UCs.
Further, the Asian-American community is most outraged in UC’s lack of outreach or consultation from the Asian community before instituting the changes.
I am a firm believer that admissions boards should admit individuals and not individuals from X-ethnic group. With that said, special attention does need to be paid to underrepresented minorities. While much of the Asian community suggest the requirement changes would lower the academic standards of the UC system, I believe any drop in academics are minimal as the increased diversity would outweigh any potential drop and will aid the melting-pot development of California youth.
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Berkeley is selective in their admissions process and can only allow a certain amount of students to attend each year. They cannot allow too many students due to various factors like resource capacity. So the amount of students going in each year is relatively fixed. Right now the Asian population at Berkeley is almost exactly 40% per OSR’s report. Let us assume it to be 37-40% because certain Asian races will be considered under the bill. The white population is 30.3%. By factoring race admissions, there will obviously be students of Asian and White descent who will not be able to attend for mostly the sole reason of race. By modeling expected Black student enrollment after 1990′s data (Affirmative Action was allowed then), I believe the goal might be, say 9% (its 3% right now) for black students, which is in line with ivy league figures. Assuming a constant 37-40% and 30% population for Asians and Whites I mentioned above (been like this for many years now) in that case, 1700+ seats will need to be either CREATED or VACATED. Creation is near impossible due to our budget cuts. This is only for the black population, I have not even mentioned the Hispanic students like me, whom will see increases undoubtedly as well. Due to my religious beliefs and convictions do not see this as fair because students will be displaced based almost solely on skin color alone. I understand the need for minority representation but the mechanics of how this will happen as I just illustrated sound extremely disturbing. How will you guys reconcile White and Asian students being excluded based on almost skin color alone? I understand the need for more black and hispanic representation but I cannot bear to support implicit race-based exclusion of well-qualified students.
http://osr2.berkeley.edu/twiki/bin/view/Main/Fall2010EthnicDistribution
This is why UC’s ranking will keep going south.
Great blog!
Thanks
Good thought!
Thanks
Nice point of view. Keep it up.
Another reason to hate “social engineering” and “diversity” b.s.