The University of Rochester is a member of the UCA |
Once again, the Universal College Application
(UCA) is paving the way for others in the industry to
follow, by introducing changes
designed to make it easier for applicants who do not identify as either woman
or man to describe how they wish to be identified to colleges.
In a statement released to colleges and others on Sunday but
embargoed for Tuesday, the UCA announced that effective July 1, its standard
application form will include a modification to its question about an applicant’s
sex and will add a new gender identity question.
The modified question relating to the sex of an applicant
will continue to be a required question but changes from
simply asking “Sex” to now asking “Legal Sex.” The options continue to be
either “Female” or “Male,” and the applicant must choose one response.
The new “Gender Identity” question is optional, and the
choices are “Woman,” “Man” or “Self-Identify” with a free-form text field
provided.
Late Monday, the Common
Application reversed a long-standing policy set by its board of directors
in 2011 and followed the UCA lead by announcing on its website that students
applying in 2016-17 will have “the ability to express their gender identity in
several ways including within the Profile page, optional free response text
field, as well as in member colleges’ specific sections.”
According to the UCA, the application modifications were
requested by member colleges and universities as well as by national LGBTQ
student advisory organizations. Over the
past year, UCA has worked closely with Campus
Pride and the Stonewall Center at
the University of Massachusetts Amherst to carefully craft its response to the
requests from LGBTQ youth, higher education and youth advocacy organizations.
“The Universal College Application is being responsive to
today’s diverse student population by adding the gender identity question. We
need this information to ensure we are supporting all students’ academic
experiences,” said Shane Windmeyer, executive director of Campus Pride. “Campus
Pride applauds the Universal College Application for being the first to do so
on their standardized form.”
In its statement,
the Common App indicated that the decision to change position came after an
“ongoing dialogue” with member colleges and universities and in consultation
with the Application Advisory and Outreach Committees.
“We asked all the companies that produce admissions
applications to add a question about gender identity, and the Universal College
Application was the only one that immediately saw the value of such a change
and made it,” explained Dr. Genny Beemyn, the director of the Stonewall Center. “Others are now following suit.”
And by working with organizations supporting the LGBTQ
community, the UCA approach is less controversial and more in line with what experts
believe is appropriate language.
According to the Common App, their change will offer a free-response text field to give students a place to further describe their gender
identity. Within the Profile screen, the
sex question will be modified to “sex assigned at birth” as opposed to the UCA’s
modification to “legal sex.”
Representing Campus Pride, Windmeyer noted that the language “sex
assigned at birth” is problematic and suggested that while the open-ended field
is an inclusive approach, it will be challenging for data collection with
gender identity.
In fact, one of the motivations behind the optional gender
identity question is the “clarified” legal concerns associated with Title IX
compliance. Colleges now have more of an incentive to seek information about
transgender applicants and students. And
if a recent
discussion on the Common Data Set listserv is any indication, there are
associated reporting problems for colleges providing data to IPEDS (Integrated Postsecondary Education
Data System).
For everyone involved, the willingness of both the Common
Application and the UCA to modify their applications in ways that help make
gender identification easier for applicants and result in better reporting for
colleges marks an historic shift in attitude. Note that the Coalition and CollegeNET® have yet to comment on
their respective positions in this regard, but it seems likely they will follow suit.
“I think we’re all going to have to take a step forward and
stop assuming, to the extent that we do, that any specific person standing in
front of us has an identity that we can discern at a glance,” said Jonathan
Burdick, dean of college admission and vice provost for enrollment initiatives
at the University of Rochester, in
support of the UCA announcement on Sunday. “That’s kind of exciting, I think, to be
living in a society on the cusp of a new, more sophisticated degree of
understanding about what it means to be a human being.”
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