所谓告哈佛在大学录取中歧视亚裔的状词原文
原告: Students For Fair Addmissions (SFFA), Inc.
被告: President and Fellows of Harvard College and the Board
studentsforfairadmissions.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/SFFA-v.-Harvard-Complaint.pdf
SFFA is a coalition of prospective applicants and applicants to higher
education institutions who were denied admission to higher education institutions, their
parents, and other individuals who support the organization’s purpose and mission of
eliminating racial discrimination in higher education admissions. SFFA has members
throughout the country.
这里有人中文帖子介绍这个案子,不知发帖人是不是 SFFA 成员。
起诉书中一些有趣的数字:
Despite having an endowment of approximately $36.4 billion, Harvard
accepts substantial direct financial assistance from the Federal government through,
among other things, grants and loans. In 2010, Harvard accepted more than $6.6 million
in federal funds. In 2011, Harvard accepted more than $11.9 million in federal funds. In
2012, Harvard accepted more than $20.9 million in federal funds. In 2013, Harvard
accepted more than $13.4 million in federal funds. Harvard also has received and will
further receive substantial direct financial assistance from the Federal government in
2014.
公立不搞 legacy:
As a consequence, eliminating legacy preferences in conjunction with
other race-neutral admissions policies can achieve student body diversity. Several
universities, including Texas A&M University, the University of Georgia, and the
University of California, have increased their student body diversity by ending their
practice of favoring legacies in the admissions process in conjunction with the
elimination of racial preferences.
Furthermore, one study found that eliminating legacy preferences in
combination with other race-neutral admissions criteria could more than double African-
American and Hispanic enrollment and more than triple the enrollment of
socioeconomically disadvantaged students.
亚裔主要是用中国人做例子:
Jennifer Soo Hoo, who is of Chinese descent, scored a 34 out of 36 on the ACT. Jennifer was rejected by every Ivy League school
Kai Chan, a Princeton doctoral student in economics and the son of Chinese immigrants,
观察能力很强的高中康色拉:
According to one high school guidance counselor, Asian Americans face
difficulty because they cannot distinguish themselves within their community: “every
single child has had music lessons. Every single child succeeds well in math. Every
single child has done community service in a hospital. Every child has done Chinese or
Korean studies on Saturday and is fluent in that language.”