Public Statement: Admission Bias Against Massachusetts Residents

Share on Facebook
Share on Twitter
Share on
LinkedIn
+

Freshman admission to the University of Massachusetts’ flagship Amherst campus is more competitive for the Commonwealth’s students than for out-of-state applicants, as reported in Pioneer Institute’s study, “Differentiating Admissions Standards at UMass-Amherst to Meet Out-of-State Enrollment Targets.”

For instance, in the fall of 2016, the average combined SAT scores of accepted, in-state, first-time degree-seeking Massachusetts students were 23 points higher than the average of similar students accepted from out-of-state. The numbers imply that Massachusetts residents are held to a higher admissions standard. The pattern of accepting out-of-state students with lesser academic credentials than in-state students has been consistent since at least 2010, with respect to both combined SAT scores and high school grade point averages.

Solutions

There are solutions to the perverse outcome of current UMass admission policies.  One example is the University of California.  The UC system had been on course similar to UMass when a state audit found the University had lowered its standards for non-resident admissions.   In response to public outrage sparked by the audit, University officials committed to only accepting out-of-state students with higher academic qualifications than the average of accepted in-state students. Under the new practice, accepted out-of-state students at the flagship Berkeley campus in the fall of 2017 far out-performed in-state accepted students, scoring on average 115 points higher on the combined SAT. The average GPA of accepted non-resident students was also higher than their in-state counterparts. 

North Carolina provides another instructive example. To curb growing out-of-state enrollment, in 1986 the University of North Carolina capped the number of out-of-state students at 18 percent of total enrollment.  In 2016, UNC’s flagship campus at Chapel Hill was fined $1 million for exceeding its non-resident enrollment cap for the second consecutive year, with 19.5 percent of enrollees coming from out-of-state.

Massachusetts can address troubling UMass admissions trend and end the potential harm to Massachusetts students and residents.  The issue is not whether to welcome talented out-of-state or international students; the Commonwealth should strive to bring in young talent with the hope that they will one day make their homes here and contribute to growing the state economy.  The issue is that since Massachusetts taxpayers are subsidizing the UMass system — and such subsidies have grown from $519 million (2013) to $721 million (2017) in just the past four years — Massachusetts students should not be penalized for growing up here.

 

Stay Connected!

 

Related Posts

Try to make your point more skillfully. . . err, I mean more subtly

/
As I have been in the past critical of Michael Graham's column,…

The Revolving Door Also Swings Close to Home

/
There's been some hand-wringing recently over the increasingly…

Truth Telling

/
An eye-opening quote from the CBO's analysis of the proposed…

Is quasi-governmental power a 21st century skill

/
Robert Pondiscio of Core Knowledge passed on this nugget: Common…

Metrics Matter

/
Noah Bierman of the Globe had an interesting piece in Sunday's…

Going After the Cabbies

/
City Councillor John Tobin has proposed a sliding taxi fare scale…

The Know-Nothing Amendments: Barriers to School Choice in Massachusetts

/
Barriers to School Choice in Massachusetts Author(s): Cornelius…

Is he just spinning or out of the loop?

/
The other day my esteemed colleague Steve Poftak and I, in separate…

Enough about Marian Walsh, let's talk about Quasi-Public Conduits

/
The Patrick Administration's publicly stated (still!) strategy…

Assignment Desk: No Compensation Provision of Pension Reform

/
To: Hilary Chabot, Matt Viser and whomever else is writing on…

Begging to Be Unpacked

/
(Great minds think alike -- My colleague beat me to the punch.…

When falling demand and inflexible management collide

/
There's a rather curious editorial in today's Globe. I don't…

Take a deep breath and relax on union infiltration of charters

/
Our Education Intelligence agent comes through with an interesting…

Live Blogging the President's Press Conference

/
Sort of. I'm not really in the East Room of the White House,…

Is KIPP really scalable?

/
Yesterday on Slate, in her review of Jay Mathews' new book on…

Eye on Paul Levy

/
This space has long been in the tank for Paul Levy. His leadership…

Question on Legislative Management?

/
The Carol Aloisi story was in yesterday's Globe, but no one has…

Bailout Fever Continues

/
Even those nesting Russian dolls are getting some of the action…