The Supreme Court finished issuing its biggest decisions of the term last week, but that doesnโt mean weโre done talking about them. On Thursday, the court gutted race-conscious affirmative action, putting serious limits on how and when colleges can use race in admissions. The ruling will have the greatest impact on highly-selective colleges with lower admissions rates. So who better to talk to than the students at those universities.
Suggested Reading
The Root took a trip over to New York University, a private college with a 13 percent acceptance rate. And it should come as no surprise that NYU students had a lot to say about the decision.
โThe results are devastating,โ says Maya Strong, a rising senior studying PreLaw at NYU. โJust being a Black woman who has young Black brothers, who have other family members wanting to go to higher education, itโs just a devastating decision.โ
CJ King, another rising PreLaw senior at NYU, says heโs nervous about the impact the decision will have on diversity at top law schools like NYU. โWe already know that these classrooms are predominantly white,โ says King, who says he picked NYU because he wanted to learn in a diverse environment. โHow, then, does this change the dynamics of schooling.โ
Both King and Strong said that when they got into NYU, some people assumed that it was because of affirmative action. โI remember when I got my decision to colleges, I heard, โOh, you were just accepted because youโre gay; you were just accepted because youโre Black.โ And itโs like no, I worked my ass off,โ says King, who was at the library studying for his LSATs.
Strong says the premise of those accusations is insulting. โItโs disrespectful to all of the time and work we put into getting to college,โ she says.
Unlike some of her classmates, Strong says she didnโt have a tutor to help with test prep or someone to buy her expensive prep materials. โI remember talking to some of my classmates at NYU, and they were like, I had an SAT tutor and stuff like that, and I didnโt have a tutor,โ she says. โI didnโt even have the workbooks. It was just finding free pdfs of SAT and ACT tests online to practice. To put in all of that effort to be told youโre only here because youโre a Black woman, itโs like damn, ok.โ
Not everyone at NYU necessarily disagreed with the Supreme Courtโs affirmative action ruling. โIโm not surprised that [the Supreme Court] said itโs not ok,โ says Marcel Cado, an incoming Freshman.
โPersonally, I feel as though it should be more on income than purely race,โ says Kado, who is Black, โbecause I know people who are the same race as me who make a lot more money than I do, who would probably not need to be helped who as much as someone who doesnโt make as much.โ
Billy, a Mexican-American rising sophomore, said he felt that the Supreme Courtโs decisions in both the Harvard and University of North Carolina cases were misinformed. Billy says that the basis for the case, which was that the schools were discriminating against white and Asian applicants, was inaccurate.
โ[Affirmative action] was giving more opportunities to underrepresented communities, like Hispanic, Latino and Black communities,โ he says, โbecause historically theyโre less represented in colleges, and colleges wanted to give them a better chance because they donโt have the same opportunities to get there.โ
Straight From
Sign up for our free daily newsletter.