* . *
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
Saturday, December 20, 2025
Earth-News
  • Home
  • Business
  • Entertainment
    Nate Bargatze is leaving his podcast — and Utah recently saw why – Deseret News

    Nate Bargatze Is Leaving His Podcast – What Utah Fans Recently Went Through

    State Farm Arena Ranks In The Top 5 Live Entertainment Venues In The U.S. & Top 7 In The World, According To Billboard – Secret Atlanta

    State Farm Arena Ranks In The Top 5 Live Entertainment Venues In The U.S. & Top 7 In The World, According To Billboard – Secret Atlanta

    Walk on White features Conchettes and Santa – keysnews.com

    Uncover the Enchantment of Conchettes and Santa in Walk on White

    Blizzard Entertainment President on BlizzCon 2026, 35th Anniversary Plans – Variety

    Blizzard Entertainment President Reveals Thrilling BlizzCon 2026 and 35th Anniversary Celebrations

    SM Entertainment accelerates US push with early debut plans for rookie acts – The Korea Herald

    SM Entertainment Sets the Stage for a US Takeover with Exciting Early Debuts of New Rookie Acts

    Star Entertainment CEO Steve McCann to exit after bruising turnaround stint – Reuters

    Star Entertainment CEO Steve McCann to Step Down Following Tough Turnaround Battle

  • General
  • Health
  • News

    Cracking the Code: Why China’s Economic Challenges Aren’t Shaking Markets, Unlike America’s” – Bloomberg

    Trump’s Narrow Window to Spread the Truth About Harris

    Trump’s Narrow Window to Spread the Truth About Harris

    Israel-Gaza war live updates: Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh assassinated in Iran, group says

    Israel-Gaza war live updates: Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh assassinated in Iran, group says

    PAP Boss to Niger Delta Youths, Stay Away from the Protest

    PAP Boss to Niger Delta Youths, Stay Away from the Protest

    Court Restricts Protests In Lagos To Freedom, Peace Park

    Court Restricts Protests In Lagos To Freedom, Peace Park

    Fans React to Jazz Jennings’ Inspiring Weight Loss Journey

    Fans React to Jazz Jennings’ Inspiring Weight Loss Journey

    Trending Tags

    • Trump Inauguration
    • United Stated
    • White House
    • Market Stories
    • Election Results
  • Science
  • Sports
  • Technology
    Bangor School District receives new CNC router technology from First National Bank – news8000.com

    Bangor School District Unveils Cutting-Edge CNC Router Technology Thanks to Local Support

    6G discussions: How things have changed – 5gtechnologyworld.com

    The Evolution of 6G: How the Conversation Has Transformed

    Retail supply chains brace for a redefined 2026 as tariffs, technology gaps, and nearshoring upend old models – Raleigh News & Observer

    Retail Supply Chains Revolutionize in 2026: How Tariffs, Technology Gaps, and Nearshoring Are Shaping the Future

    China exploits US-funded research on nuclear technology, a congressional report says – ABC News

    Congressional Report Uncovers China’s Exploitation of US-Funded Nuclear Technology Research

    Netcracker Dominates International Business and Technology Excellence Awards – Business Wire

    Netcracker Shines Bright at International Business and Technology Excellence Awards

    Can OpenAI Respond After Google Closes the A.I. Technology Gap? – The New York Times

    Can OpenAI Stay Ahead as Google Narrows the A.I. Technology Race?

    Trending Tags

    • Nintendo Switch
    • CES 2017
    • Playstation 4 Pro
    • Mark Zuckerberg
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Business
  • Entertainment
    Nate Bargatze is leaving his podcast — and Utah recently saw why – Deseret News

    Nate Bargatze Is Leaving His Podcast – What Utah Fans Recently Went Through

    State Farm Arena Ranks In The Top 5 Live Entertainment Venues In The U.S. & Top 7 In The World, According To Billboard – Secret Atlanta

    State Farm Arena Ranks In The Top 5 Live Entertainment Venues In The U.S. & Top 7 In The World, According To Billboard – Secret Atlanta

    Walk on White features Conchettes and Santa – keysnews.com

    Uncover the Enchantment of Conchettes and Santa in Walk on White

    Blizzard Entertainment President on BlizzCon 2026, 35th Anniversary Plans – Variety

    Blizzard Entertainment President Reveals Thrilling BlizzCon 2026 and 35th Anniversary Celebrations

    SM Entertainment accelerates US push with early debut plans for rookie acts – The Korea Herald

    SM Entertainment Sets the Stage for a US Takeover with Exciting Early Debuts of New Rookie Acts

    Star Entertainment CEO Steve McCann to exit after bruising turnaround stint – Reuters

    Star Entertainment CEO Steve McCann to Step Down Following Tough Turnaround Battle

  • General
  • Health
  • News

    Cracking the Code: Why China’s Economic Challenges Aren’t Shaking Markets, Unlike America’s” – Bloomberg

    Trump’s Narrow Window to Spread the Truth About Harris

    Trump’s Narrow Window to Spread the Truth About Harris

    Israel-Gaza war live updates: Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh assassinated in Iran, group says

    Israel-Gaza war live updates: Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh assassinated in Iran, group says

    PAP Boss to Niger Delta Youths, Stay Away from the Protest

    PAP Boss to Niger Delta Youths, Stay Away from the Protest

    Court Restricts Protests In Lagos To Freedom, Peace Park

    Court Restricts Protests In Lagos To Freedom, Peace Park

    Fans React to Jazz Jennings’ Inspiring Weight Loss Journey

    Fans React to Jazz Jennings’ Inspiring Weight Loss Journey

    Trending Tags

    • Trump Inauguration
    • United Stated
    • White House
    • Market Stories
    • Election Results
  • Science
  • Sports
  • Technology
    Bangor School District receives new CNC router technology from First National Bank – news8000.com

    Bangor School District Unveils Cutting-Edge CNC Router Technology Thanks to Local Support

    6G discussions: How things have changed – 5gtechnologyworld.com

    The Evolution of 6G: How the Conversation Has Transformed

    Retail supply chains brace for a redefined 2026 as tariffs, technology gaps, and nearshoring upend old models – Raleigh News & Observer

    Retail Supply Chains Revolutionize in 2026: How Tariffs, Technology Gaps, and Nearshoring Are Shaping the Future

    China exploits US-funded research on nuclear technology, a congressional report says – ABC News

    Congressional Report Uncovers China’s Exploitation of US-Funded Nuclear Technology Research

    Netcracker Dominates International Business and Technology Excellence Awards – Business Wire

    Netcracker Shines Bright at International Business and Technology Excellence Awards

    Can OpenAI Respond After Google Closes the A.I. Technology Gap? – The New York Times

    Can OpenAI Stay Ahead as Google Narrows the A.I. Technology Race?

    Trending Tags

    • Nintendo Switch
    • CES 2017
    • Playstation 4 Pro
    • Mark Zuckerberg
No Result
View All Result
Earth-News
No Result
View All Result
Home Science

Why do colleges have legacy admissions? It started as a way to keep out Jews.

July 29, 2023
in Science
Why do colleges have legacy admissions? It started as a way to keep out Jews.
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

ByErin Blakemore

Published July 28, 2023

• 7 min read

Should college students gain admission based on academic merit—or who their parents are? That question has become more pertinent than ever with the U.S. Supreme Court’s invalidation of affirmative action and the Department of Education’s announcement of a civil rights investigation into Harvard University’s preferential treatment of “legacy” students with family connections.

Although it may seem like a modern problem, it’s only been about a century since U.S. colleges and universities began factoring family relationships and other criteria like extracurricular activities, interviews, and standardized test scores into their admissions decisions. These policies, it turns out, are rooted in anti-Semitic attitudes that aimed to keep Jewish students out of elite schools.

Here’s how anti-Jewish discrimination fueled modern college admissions—long before affirmative action ever existed.

Training grounds for society’s elite

Before the late 19th century, a college education was largely out of reach for anyone but wealthy Protestants, who founded universities and colleges to prepare their sons for cultural and community leadership. Though these institutions extended preferential treatment to the sons of previous graduates, their entrance requirements were relatively lax. In a time before widespread public education, few who could afford to pay were turned away.

But beginning in the 1840s, the makeup of American society changed with waves of immigration that brought Catholics and Jews into the country in large numbers. As these emigrants flooded into the nation, write sociologists Deborah L. Coe and James D. Davidson, their presence threatened white Protestant groups who had previously dominated mainstream culture.

(How Ellis Island shepherded millions of immigrants into America.)

“As a result,” Coe and Davidson write, “anti-Catholic and anti-Semitic sentiments found their way into a variety of mechanisms that were created in response to the undesirable demographic changes.” This soon filtered into college admissions too.

Catholics quickly founded their own universities and encouraged members of their religion to attend them. So it was Jewish college enrollment that generated special concern at predominantly Protestant institutions.

Panic over ‘undesirable’ college applicants

Institutions historically tolerated some Jewish students, but only those whom officials felt had the proper class standing and had appropriately “assimilated” into mainstream American culture.

In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, newer arrivals from majority Jewish enclaves didn’t fit that mold, so elite Protestants attempted to close ranks. University officials who bought into longstanding stereotypes of Jews as clannish, conniving, and socially undesirable worried that admitting Jews would taint the reputation of the schools. Plus, they disliked the idea of their sons being educated alongside them.

No longer was mere money sufficient for acceptance into elite social circles. As historian John Higham writes, Protestant elites of the era “grasped at social distinctions that were more than pecuniary,” including “the cult of genealogy.” Suddenly, institutions including social clubs, sports organizations, prep schools, and even neighborhoods emphasized family connections as part of the price of entry—shutting Jews out by default.

It was no different in higher education, where leaders were alarmed by rising Jewish enrollment. In response, they began to brainstorm how to limit Jewish applicants without endangering public funding or damaging their reputations.

Elite universities’ anti-Semitic legacy

Yale University was one of those institutions. “There seems to be no question that the University as a whole has about all of this race that it can well handle,” wrote Robert Nelson Corwin, Yale’s admissions chairman, in 1922. Though Jewish students showed the same academic achievement as their counterparts, Corwin wrote, “members of this race…graduate from college as alien in morals and manners as they were upon admission.”

He recommended that Yale implement “non-intellectual requirements,” including letters of recommendation, in-person interviews, and psychological testing, to limit its number of Jews.

(How the Holocaust happened in plain sight.)

Corwin was far from alone. From Harvard to Rutgers, Columbia to Tufts, elite colleges and universities began trying anything and everything to control the makeup of their student bodies. Some implemented quotas to limit the number of Jews in new classes. Others focused recruiting in areas they knew had lower populations of Jews, and began looking more closely at extracurricular activities that indicated the social class and religion of applicants. More admissions requirements meant more reasons to turn down students—and a way to mask anti-Semitic school policies.

When Jews won more academic scholarships, schools like Harvard and Yale discontinued them in favor of financial aid. They also embraced the new field of psychological testing, offering tests that measured aptitude and not achievement, such as the Thorndike Tests for Mental Alertness.

“The primitive and biased tests effectively reduced Jewish enrollment [at Columbia] by half,” write education historians Jim Horn and Denise Wilburn, noting that many such tests were developed by eugenicists in search of “a purportedly objective way to quantify the structural racism of the day and to have it accepted as scientific.”

Another new requirement was so common it became almost ubiquitous during the period: the photograph. Historian Marianne R. Sanua writes that at Columbia, one fraternity publication satirically recommended that to get around newly tightened admissions requirements, applicants should dye their hair blonde, pretend they were taller, and have photos taken that downplayed stereotypically “Jewish” facial features.

Finally, higher education institutions also implemented internal legacy admissions policies, actively recruiting relatives of alumni and offering them a leg up on other applicants.

“All properly qualified sons of Dartmouth alumni and Dartmouth College officers will be accepted,” wrote Dartmouth College in its alumni magazine in 1922. The school also required applicants to submit multiple letters from Dartmouth alumni, promising that it would prioritize “men who plainly possess the qualities of leadership or qualities of outstanding promise” over those “qualified by high scholarship ranks but with no evidence of positive qualities otherwise.”

The persistence of legacy admissions

As anti-Jewish sentiment became less mainstream in the wake of World War II and the Holocaust and with the rise of the civil rights movement, many universities phased out their more overtly anti-Semitic policies. But many of the restrictions put in place to limit Jewish applicants stuck. Standardized testing and interviews are still common requirements for college admissions, and today’s institutions of higher learning still admit more wealthy students.

(The site of America’s worst antisemitic attack wants to tell a story of hope.)

One recent analysis found that children from the top 0.1 percent income bracket are more than twice as likely to gain admission to Ivy League schools compared to poorer students with the same test scores—and that 46 percent of their advantage can be attributed to admissions policies that extend preferential treatment to “legacy” students.

Despite some institutions like Amherst, Johns Hopkins, and Wesleyan announcing that they’ve abandoning the practice, the system is still common today. In a 2018 survey by Inside Higher Education, 42 percent of admissions directors at private colleges and universities said legacy status is a factor in their admissions process, compared to 6 percent at public institutions.

Among those institutions is Harvard, whose legacy admissions policy is now facing scrutiny by federal civil rights investigators. The Harvard Crimson reports that among its 2022 freshman class, more than 14 percent surveyed said they were legacy students, and self-reported legacies were likelier to be white. Over a third with one or more parents who attended Harvard reported a combined family income of $500,000 a year or more.

Will legacy admissions go the way of affirmative action? Until the results of the Department of Education’s reported investigation become clear, there’s no way of knowing. But many of the policies once implemented to keep Jews out of higher education in the U.S. are likely to persist.

>>> Read full article>>>
Copyright for syndicated content belongs to the linked Source : National Geographic – https://www.nationalgeographic.com/history/article/legacy-admissions-college-anti-semitism-united-states

Tags: collegeslegacyscience
Previous Post

The rise of wellness travel, from rewilding to yoga and pilgrimages

Next Post

What is natural wine, and which ones should you be drinking?

Ecosystem interactions shape spread of wasting disease – EurekAlert!

Unraveling How Ecosystem Interactions Fuel the Spread of Wasting Disease

December 20, 2025
Greater Mohican Audubon Society keeps citizen science, birding alive with Christmas Bird Count – Ashland Source

Greater Mohican Audubon Society keeps citizen science, birding alive with Christmas Bird Count – Ashland Source

December 20, 2025
Accelerating AI-Powered Chemistry and Materials Science Simulations with NVIDIA ALCHEMI Toolkit-Ops – NVIDIA Developer

Boosting AI-Driven Chemistry and Materials Science Simulations with the NVIDIA ALCHEMI Toolkit

December 20, 2025
The Adventures of Fatherhood – OC Today-Dispatch

The Exciting Journey of Fatherhood: Embracing Every Moment

December 20, 2025
Bangor School District receives new CNC router technology from First National Bank – news8000.com

Bangor School District Unveils Cutting-Edge CNC Router Technology Thanks to Local Support

December 20, 2025
N.B.A. Tweaks Its Rules to Thwart Sports Betting Cheats – The New York Times

NBA Overhauls Rules to Tackle Sports Betting Cheating Head-On

December 20, 2025
Here’s how the Red Bull Tetris® World Final uplevelled gameplay with drones – Red Bull

Here’s how the Red Bull Tetris® World Final uplevelled gameplay with drones – Red Bull

December 19, 2025
Glossy Podcast: Breaking down the K-shaped economy – glossy.co

The K-Shaped Economy Explained: How It Will Shape Our Future

December 19, 2025
Nate Bargatze is leaving his podcast — and Utah recently saw why – Deseret News

Nate Bargatze Is Leaving His Podcast – What Utah Fans Recently Went Through

December 19, 2025
They came when Brown needed them. Meet the second responders. – The Providence Journal

They came when Brown needed them. Meet the second responders. – The Providence Journal

December 19, 2025

Categories

Archives

December 2025
M T W T F S S
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293031  
« Nov    
Earth-News.info

The Earth News is an independent English-language daily published Website from all around the World News

Browse by Category

  • Business (20,132)
  • Ecology (978)
  • Economy (996)
  • Entertainment (21,873)
  • General (18,843)
  • Health (10,036)
  • Lifestyle (1,009)
  • News (22,149)
  • People (1,003)
  • Politics (1,010)
  • Science (16,212)
  • Sports (21,497)
  • Technology (15,979)
  • World (985)

Recent News

Ecosystem interactions shape spread of wasting disease – EurekAlert!

Unraveling How Ecosystem Interactions Fuel the Spread of Wasting Disease

December 20, 2025
Greater Mohican Audubon Society keeps citizen science, birding alive with Christmas Bird Count – Ashland Source

Greater Mohican Audubon Society keeps citizen science, birding alive with Christmas Bird Count – Ashland Source

December 20, 2025
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact

© 2023 earth-news.info

No Result
View All Result

© 2023 earth-news.info

No Result
View All Result

© 2023 earth-news.info

Go to mobile version