Tool 1
The Diversity Imperative:
The Compelling Case
Tool 2
Access and Diversity: Related but Distinct Concepts
Tool 3
Key Terms and Concepts: Knowing the Basics
Tool 4
Mythbusters:
Correcting Common Misunderstandings
Tool 5
Making Connections:
A Holistic View of
Key Strategies
Tool 6
Admission: Exploring Key
Strategies for Achieving Success
Tool 7
Financial Aid and Scholarships:
Exploring Key Strategies for
Achieving Success
Tool 8
Getting from Here to There: Managing the Process of Policy Change
Tool 9
Beyond Federal Law: State Voter Initiatives and Their Consequences
Tool 10
Taking a Stand: Higher Education Leadership for the 21st Century
#3 Key Terms and Concepts: Knowing the Basics
View this as a PDFThe Issue
Language surrounding access and diversity policies
can often be confusing and highly charged. To help
avoid debates that result in little more than “two
(or more) ships passing in the night,” as well as
unnecessary polarization among key stakeholders,
it is important to identify, clearly define and frame
key terms that are typically integral to institution-specific
policy development on access and diversity
issues.
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The Policy Context
Affirmative Action — Historically, “affirmative
action” has referred to remedial and social justice
policies designed to cure the problems of the past.
Although not definitively addressed by the courts,
strong arguments exist that the term “affirmative
action” is not an appropriate characterization of
mission-driven, forward-looking, access- and
diversity-related student policies that include
some consideration of race or ethnicity. Moreover,
the ambiguities inherent in the term “affirmative
action” (everyone has their own definition)
should cause one to pause and consider the value
of maintaining a label that means very different
things to different people and that, in any event,
tends to be a lightning rod term. At a minimum,
the term lacks precision, is inherently ambiguous
and is often used effectively by those whose
aim is to confuse and obfuscate meaningful,
educationally grounded policy discussions
regarding access- and diversity-related issues.
Policy Tip: It is best to stay away from using the
term “affirmative action” as part of your institution’s
vernacular regarding student access and diversity.
In any event, focus on describing your institution’s
precise policy aims and operations.
Diversity — “Diversity” must be defined in
relation to a specific institution as its meaning is
derived from the goals an institution establishes
for itself. Further, as a matter of federal law,
“diversity” cannot be defined only with reference
to race and/or ethnicity. Otherwise, it reflects more
of an interest in racial balancing than in promoting
authentic educational diversity, an interest that
has been uniformly rejected by federal courts.
The term must encompass the range of student
backgrounds, talents, skills and experiences
needed to ensure full access or advance the
benefits of student diversity on campus. This array of characteristics may be (and frequently is) wide
ranging, including, for instance, first-generation
status (or, similarly those whose backgrounds
reflect a significant “distance traveled” in reaching
the doors of higher education), socioeconomic
status, racial and ethnic background, artistic
talents (for instance, piano virtuosos), athletic
skills and accomplishment, fluency in certain
languages, unique life experiences (ranging from
notable volunteer activities to having lived in areas
that tend to be underrepresented on campus), and
more.
Policy Tip: The use of the term “diversity” should
be premised upon a shared, clear understanding of
what the term means for a specific institution.
Critical Mass — Social science research reflects
that a minority group (especially one that has
been historically discriminated against) is easily
marginalized when it is only a small presence in
a larger population. “As the group's presence and
level of participation grows, at a particular point
the perspective of members of the minority group
and the character of relations between minority
and nonminority changes qualitatively. … The
discrete point [at which this occurs] is known as “critical mass” (Etkowitz et al., 1994). “Critical
mass” is premised on the need to attract sufficient
numbers of underrepresented students who will
advance education goals based on institution-specific
research and experience.
Policy Tip: “Critical mass” should be understood
and defined as a contextual benchmark relative to a
particular student body, rather than as a particular
number or percentage of students and rigid quota.
Quota — Much like “affirmative action,” the
term “quota” can be a lightning rod term that
obfuscates rather than enlightens. “Quota” has a
very specific legal definition: According to the U.S.
Supreme Court, quotas impose “a fixed number or
percentage [of students and/or faculty] which must
be attained, or which cannot be exceeded” (Grutter
v. Bollinger, 2003). The use of quotas is not a legally
acceptable method for achieving the educational
benefits of diversity.
Policy Tip: “Quotas” as defined in federal law
cannot drive access and diversity policies — at least
to the extent that they are associated with the racial,
ethnic and gender composition of a class.
“Race Conscious” and “Race Neutral” — Federal
law establishes two categories of policies that
may bear on access and diversity goals: “race-conscious”
policies, which trigger a heightened
review by courts, and “race-neutral” policies,
which do not. Although not definitively settled, see Resource 3, race-conscious policies are ones
that involve explicit racial classifications as well as
those that are neutral on their surface but that are
motivated by a racially discriminatory purpose, principally
resulting in racially discriminatory effects. Race-neutral
policies are those that, with respect to
both language and intent, are neutral, as well as
those that expand efforts to generate additional
applicant interest, which may be “race conscious” in intent, but which do not confer
material benefit to the exclusion of nontargeted
students.
Policy Tip: Language in a policy is not the only
thing that can result in a policy being characterized
as “race conscious” and therefore subject to
heightened judicial review. The intent behind a
facially neutral policy can also trigger this probing
scrutiny.
Underrepresented Students — In the context
of race- and ethnicity-related diversity policies,
consideration should be given to defining this
term with respect to groups of students for whom
there are insufficient numbers to establish a critical
mass that will advance the educational benefits of
diversity. Who qualifies as an “underrepresented
student” will vary by institution.
Policy Tip: Defining those who qualify as
“underrepresented students” should be done with
specific reference to an individual institution’s
current and historical student body composition.
Importantly, identifying and/or targeting
“underrepresented students” does not mean ensuring
that the student body is proportional to its relevant
service area (community, state or national). If
there is a goal associated with the aim of increasing
“underrepresented students,” it should be framed in
the context of achieving a critical mass, as defined
above — at least to the extent that institutional
leaders intend to align their policies with the central
elements of those successfully defended by the
University of Michigan in Grutter v. Bollinger.
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Key Action Steps
- Review all policies, website materials and other publications to ensure coherence, consistency and transparency on the institution-specific meaning of key terms.
- Ensure that key enrollment and external relations staff are trained on the correct definitions of key terms and concepts — and that they can connect them to their work.
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Selected Resources
- Etkowitz et al., “The Paradox of Critical Mass for Women in Science: Change in Workplace Structure Needed to Integrate Women Successfully in Academic Science Departments,” Science 266 (1994): 51.
- Coleman, Palmer, and Winnick, Race-Neutral Policies in Higher Education: From Theory to Action (The College Board, 2008). (This paper explains in depth the concepts of “race-conscious” and “race-neutral” under federal law.)
- Admissions and Diversity After Michigan: The Next Generation of Legal and Policy Issues (The College Board, 2006). (Chapter 4 of this manual addresses the concepts of “critical mass” and “underrepresented students,” and how arguments regarding critical mass were successfully framed in the University of Michigan litigation.)
- Roadmap to Diversity: Key Legal and Educational Policy Foundations for Medical Schools (Association of American Medical Colleges, 2008).
- Brief of the American Educational Research Association, et al., filed in Grutter v. Bollinger.
- Grutter v. Bollinger, 539 U.S. 306 (2003).
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November 2009 Version

