Students for Fair Admissions is challenging Harvard and University of North Carolina admissions practices. The group says it's on behalf of students who feel like they have been discriminated against. In the case of Harvard, they say Asian American students are getting kind of docked in the admissions process. They argue there's basically a ceiling on the number of Asian American students that Harvard will admit.
For decades, colleges and universities across the US have promoted the value of having a diverse student body on campus.
The Supreme Court could soon change that. On Oct. 31, the justices will consider two challenges to affirmative action in college admissions, and if they choose to strike it down, there will be enormous repercussions for who gets into the nation’s top schools — and who doesn’t.
So what will college campuses look like in an America without affirmative action? And are there other ways for admissions officers to work around a potential ban on the practice?
Bloomberg Senior Reporter Greg Stohr joins with insights on what we can expect from the Supreme Court, and Equality Reporter Kelsey Butler explains how colleges around the country are bracing for massive disruption.
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