Dec 23, 2009

Do Colleges Discriminate Against Women in Admissions?

Last month, the US Commission on Civil Rights announced that it is conducting an investigation of DC area colleges to determine whether admissions offices are discriminating against women in admissions. Nineteen colleges and universities representing a range of four-year institutions have been selected for review including:

  • Historically black: Howard University, Lincoln University of Pennsylvania, University of Maryland Eastern Shore, and Virginia Union University
  • Religious: Catholic University, Loyola of Maryland, and Messiah College
  • Highly selective private institutions: Georgetown, Johns Hopkins, and Gettysburg College
  • Very selective private institution: University of Richmond
  • Moderately selective private institutions: Goucher College, Goldey-Beacom College, Washington College, and York College of Pennsylvania
  • Moderately selective public institutions: Shepherd University, Sippensburg University of Pennsylvania, University of Delaware, and University of Maryland Baltimore County

It’s no secret that women dominate college enrollment and currently represent 57 percent of all undergraduate students. By 2018, the total number of women on US campuses is projected to rise to 59 percent. They graduate from high school in higher numbers, are more likely to take college entrance tests such as the SAT, go on to college in higher numbers, and are more likely to complete their undergraduate education. Last year, 58 percent of all bachelors’ degrees were awarded to women.

The question the Civil Rights Commission hopes to resolve is whether colleges are attempting to fix undergraduate gender imbalances by discriminating against female applicants. In other words, are highly qualified women being unfairly rejected in favor of less qualified men to keep campuses closer to a 50/50 gender split?

The Commission might start by simply comparing rates of admission for men and women at each of the colleges being investigated. The following chart was generated using the most recent Common Data Set information found on a sample of area college websites:

Institution

Enrolled

Applied

Admitted

% Admitted

M

W

M

W

M

W

M

W

UVA

1406

1846

8380

9983

3014

3721

36

37

William & Mary

605

871

4309

7327

1859

2107

43

29

Mary Washington

295

553

1539

3061

1111

2147

72

70

U of Richmond

325

413

3343

4627

1074

1451

32

31

Christopher Newport

494

719

2966

4351

1665

2757

56

63

VCU

1520

2174

7093

10,396

4170

6023

59

58

Virginia Tech

3005

2451

11,863

8752

7503

5982

63

68

George Mason

1156

1341

6042

6901

3616

4499

60

65

Washington & Lee

230

224

2963

3423

554

520

19

15

Lynchburg

274

327

1712

2536

1207

1727

71

68

American

604

969

6003

9410

2982

5175

50

55

Catholic

426

475

2352

2828

1857

2342

79

83

GW

1041

1408

8265

11,165

3258

4003

39

36

Georgetown

1571

18,696

3514

Unavailable

Howard

Data not made available

Johns Hopkins

624

582

7562

7286

1893

1710

25

24

Goucher

122

277

1198

2365

678

1683

57

71

Loyola Maryland

430

638

3105

4518

2082

3150

67

70

UMBC

907

650

2834

2986

2215

1960

78

66

Washington College

167

248

1356

2057

900

1455

66

71

UMD

4150

28,000+

Data not made available

Towson

1039

1787

5978

9721

3354

6255

56

64

St. Mary’s of MD

208

256

932

1419

532

756

57

53

St. John’s of Annapolis

Data not made available

U of Delaware

1412

1985

9213

13,278

5140

7446

56

56

Note that both Georgetown and the University of Maryland have removed Common Data Set information from their websites. St. John’s of Annapolis has a long-standing policy not to participate in data collection related to the US News and World Report rankings.

A more complete analysis aimed at determining possible discrimination in admissions would involve a review of data over time as well as comparisons of credentials, proposed majors, and financial aid awarded. Presumably this information is what is being subpoenaed by the Civil Rights Commission. For now, it’s interesting to compare how different colleges and universities dealt with gender imbalances within their applicant pools during the most recent year for which data is available. It was clearly more difficult to be admitted as a woman to the College of William and Mary than at American or Catholic, based on simple admissions percentages. Yet of the three, only Catholic University is under review for possible discrimination in its admissions practices.

All that is known about the colleges selected for investigation is that they are within 100 miles of DC and are representative of six categories of four-year institutions. "There is no suggestion that any of these schools are doing anything wrong," said Lenore Ostrowsky, the commission's acting chief of public affairs. "They just fit the profile."

1 comment:

  1. They do it in New England, too. Sexist pigs.

    ReplyDelete