ACT Scores Are Down. Grades Are Up. Something's Fishy.
Grade inflation is making test-optional college admissions unworkable.
Grade inflation is making test-optional college admissions unworkable.
Plus: Joe Biden pushes through new background checks for gun purchases, O.J. Simpson dies, NA beer takes D.C., and more...
Colleges have turned away from standardized testing in admissions. Are the tests really that bad?
A rushed attempt to simplify the financial aid form has led to persistent technical difficulties, frustrating families and colleges alike.
The president of the new University of Austin wants to reverse the decline of higher education in America.
The college is the latest in a spate of schools reinstating SAT and ACT test requirements.
There's increasing evidence that standardized tests accurately measure student achievement and are helpful, not hurtful, to disadvantaged applicants.
The author of The End of Race Politics: Arguments for a Colorblind America says colorblindness should remain our North Star during a live conversation with Nick Gillespie.
A Q&A with Coleman Hughes, author of The End of Race Politics: Arguments for a Colorblind America.
Admitting students to America as refugees provides resettlement in America, overcoming the need for an F-1 visa and the challenge of travel documents.
Preferential college admissions violated the 14th Amendment's Equal Protection Clause.
In an attempt to make the student body more conservative, Christopher Rufo says the school is actively "rebalancing" the ratio of male and female students.
It's time to retire the idea that getting rid of standardized tests increases equality.
If activists want to help young people, they should start before college.
A new complaint argues that legacy admissions violate the Civil Rights Act.
Join Reason on YouTube and Facebook Thursday at 1 p.m. Eastern for a live discussion of the Court's recent rulings on affirmative action and same-sex wedding services.
Plus: A listener question on the potential efficacy of congressional term limits.
They probably aren't illegal under current law. But they are nonetheless wrong for many of the same reasons as racial preferences.
A preliminary assessment of today's decisions. The majority rightly struck a blow against the use of racial preferences for purposes of advancing "diversity" in education. But there are some flaws in its reasoning.
There is no reason for public universities to grant preferential treatment to the scions of their alumni.
To its credit, the world seems ready to embrace the pioneers of a homeschooled future.
The link between Bostock v. Clayton County and Students for Fair Admissions v. University of North Carolina
The Supreme Court grapples with the original meaning of the 14th Amendment in Students for Fair Admissions v. University of North Carolina.
In the two cases, brought against Harvard and the University of North Carolina, anti-affirmative action group Students for Fair Admissions argues that race-conscious admissions violate the Civil Rights Act
The likely answer is "yes." There are three types of potential litigants who probably qualify.
The number of high school seniors going on to attend college has plummeted in the past two years, deepening the already steady decline.
Do First Amendment claims about racial preferences hold water?
Doing away with standardized testing doesn't help low-income applicants gain entry to elite colleges.
Federal subsidies for higher education lead to market distortions that affect financially needy students.
Giving kids more educational options would help produce the long-term change activists want.
A November ballot initiative would pit minority communities against each other.
Plea deals aren’t about mercy these days. They’re about intimidating defendants into giving up the right to a trial.
Race-based admissions will likely make a return visit to the Supreme Court.
When Britain reversed its free college program and asked its citizens to foot a portion of their college bill, more working class people got degrees.
A social media mob successfully persuades Harvard to rescind the admission of a conservative Parkland survivor.
"I want to apologize to the students who work hard every day to get into college."
Higher education is a moral mess.
Cheating scandal should have taxpayers asking whether it's right to subsidize the campus party lifestyles of celebrity scions who fake water polo careers.
Her experience is a good example of why affirmative action policies are a bad idea.
The most sensible and effective way to police private college admissions practices isn't litigation or regulation, but competition.
Many Americans are said to be turning against higher education. They may just be sick of an expensive and dysfunctional model that's outlived its usefulness.
Seniors must choose from a list of acceptable post-school plans, or they won't graduate.
College puts the brakes on rewarding the educational successes of a minority group.
(You don't really have to shut up, but here's my money.)
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