Blog, STEM Thoughts

The real “scandals” around college admissions that are legal and much less dramatic

Lori Delale-O'Connor Headshot
Written by: Lori Delale-O’Connor, PhD, assistant professor of Education at the Center for Urban Education at The University of Pittsburgh and Leader

At a recent SLECoP watch party of the Netflix documentary Operation Varsity Blues: The College Admissions Scandal we relived the drama of the 2019 scandal that saw wealthy parents working with college admissions coach, Rick Singer, to cheat and buy their children’s way into elite universities. We had a lively chat filled with outrage at “Aunt Becky” and the admissions coach with a “bad monk haircut.” We gasped and booed at other folks with homes the size of hotels scheming to the tune of millions of dollars to get their children into elite schools. But in the midst of our popcorn-fueled outrage, one important point that came up was that while a spotlight on what was truly a heinous and illegal scheme (though few of the people involved faced any real consequences) made us angry, it overlooked many of the real “scandals” around college admissions that are legal and much less dramatic, though certainly racist and classist. In short, being wealthy and white is rewarded in ways that are completely legal, though insidious in college admissions and persistence.

Admissions policies and practices:

We see this play out in particular ways in STEM disciplines because of the racist history and current culture of STEM:

The STEM PUSH Network is working to push back against many of these processes by:

  • Supporting precollege STEM programs in developing culturally sustaining curricula and practices that support Black and Brown youth in seeing the importance of their lives and cultural understandings in STEM
  • Collaborating to support students in navigating the current structures of higher education
  • Working with higher education admissions to reimagine and dismantle inequitable admissions policies and practices.

STEM PUSH LogoSTEM PUSH Network

With a diverse group of partners, the STEM PUSH Network (Pathways for Underrepresented Students to HigherEd) is working to create systemic change in the post-secondary admissions process by reinventing the relationship between pre-college STEM programs and higher education admissions offices.

Leading the charge, the BE STEM Center will build the first national alliance of pre-college STEM programs to increase college enrollment for minoritized students.

BE STEM was created to support the work of the University of Pittsburgh’s National Science Foundation (NSF) INCLUDES team. The INCLUDES team was awarded $10 million from the NSF as an elite Alliance Award to conduct this work.

The goal of the Alliance is to increase the number of ethnically and racialized underrepresented students who are admitted to, matriculate and persist in post-secondary STEM.

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