Virginia school district accused of racial discrimination
A federal judge ruled Friday that Fairfax County Public Schools' racially driven admissions policies for its magnet high school unconstitutionally discriminated against Asian-American applicants.
The Coalition for TJ, a parent group for students at Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology in March sued the Fairfax County School Board after they adopted admissions standards that intentionally reduced Asian-American admittance by 43 percent. Judge Claude Hilton of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, Alexandria Division ruled against the district.
In October 2020, the Fairfax County School Board eliminated the entrance exam for Thomas Jefferson. The board then capped the number of students each of the district's middle schools could send to the elite, STEM-focused high school. The number of white students admitted to Thomas Jefferson's freshman class skyrocketed after the district changed the admissions policies. The school admitted 43 percent more white students, and 16 percent fewer Asian students, to the class of 2025, the Washington Free Beacon previously reported.
...
This could have implications for college admission programs that try to limit the enrollment of Asians who do well on entrance exams. The main difference in the college discrimination is that it is used to enroll more minorities who do not do as well on the tests.
Comments
Post a Comment