In the newspaper headlines and public forums, the frequency of educational reform is increasing. Race sensitive admission policies are often at the center of these discussions. For example, according to the Los Angeles Times news on 21 March 2001, the Los Angeles Community College Regional Trustee Program endorsed supporting the initiative to regain the positive behavior of the University of California admission policy. As seen in the rally at the UC Regent Conference held on March 15, 2001, there was great support from the students on this recovery.
Race-aware admission is to compensate for past discrimination: another mistake. Universities and universities are allowed to use ethnic entrance policy to plan and promote different student policies but in college vs. basketball court the university is positive to compensate for the former discrimination We decided that we can not use behavioral behavior. "Entry policy based on race means that unqualified minority students enter the university.This does not apply at all.In college entrance to lower grades students such as test scores and grades In other words, if College X requests a student with a score of 1200 at SAT, 1,300 black students may hit 1320 white children, but they have a score of 1100 Black students are not qualified yet.
If accurate, these institutions are deprived of important educational tools to prepare students for their future and society. The university must continue to promote the use of racially sensitive admission rules. This is the most effective means to create diverse student groups. In addition to the use of ethnically sensitive admissions as a major means of achieving diversity, universities and universities also consider a complementary strategy to help raise the efficiency of ethnically sensitive admission policies It must be. If this is their mission, organizations should have the right and responsibility to educate diverse student organizations for diverse societies, and should do so and that they will achieve this diversity The use of tools that make it possible should also be allowed.
Anna Arbor, an official at the University of Michigan, believes that it must be allowed to use races as an aid to create diverse student groups. The problem is a two-track grid system that black students use different criteria from other races, used in the admission process. Plaintiff Jennifer Gratz insisted that the university used race as a deciding factor in the admission decision. In this article, "I discussed major new research on the records and experiences of tens of thousands of students at top universities in Japan for over 20 years, and their aggressive action policy created a black middle class backbone and taught White classmate's integration value "