Aubrey Cindia, Paul Horten and Megan Stempowski
Mr. Griswold
AP Government
5 May 2023
Should Sex and Race be Included in College Admissions? In America, there has always been and always will be issues regarding sex and race in terms of discrimination against particular parties. Many of these ideologies are instilled in younger generations but older family members which allows the discrimination to continue into the 21st century. Affirmative action in college admissions is designed to eliminate unlawful discrimination, fix previous discrimination as well as prevent further discrimination among applicants. Some argue that if race and gender were no longer included in college admissions then there would be less diversity and it would be unfair
…show more content…
When colleges are looking at their student body, they often try to keep their ratio of men to women close to 1:1 to prove they do not discriminate between the two genders. In recent years, statistics have come out showing that the amount of female applicants is significantly higher than male applicants. Due to this, it is significantly harder for a female to get admitted to a top educational institution. Why? Logically, if more female applicants are applying that means there has to be more females rejected in order to keep the balance of males and females within the student body. With this in mind, there is a greater chance that a more qualified female applicant will be rejected from the institution in order to accept a male to keep the ratio between the genders. Gender also plays a significant role based on the major declared by the applicant. Traditionally, males dominated the science and math departments, whereas females typically went the education or humanities route. This causes an imbalance in genders for the majors which causes educational institutes to more likely admit a student that is less represented in their decided …show more content…
UNC and SFFA v. Harvard) over the span of a day. SFFA has filed lawsuits for tens of thousands of students and parents who may have wrongfully been rejected from an educational institute due to their race. SFFA v. Harvard was brought to the Supreme Court to determine if Harvard's use of race in their admission process violated the 14th amendment and Title VI of the 1964 Civil Rights Act. The SFFA v. UNC case posed a similar problem where SFFA believes affirmative action is being wrongly used to racially discriminate against a minority