Opinion

Hiding their race

To check or not to check the Asian box? That’s the choice faced by Asian-American students applying to what are supposed to be the most tolerant places on Earth: the nation’s colleges.

The AP ran a report on Asian students of mixed parentage checking “white” on their applications to avoid outing themselves as Asians. The Princeton Review Student Advantage Guide counsels Asian-Americans not to check the race box and warns against sending a photo.

In a culture that makes so much of celebrating racial minorities, and that values fairness above all, Asian-American students think that they need to hide their ethnicity because the college-admissions process is so unfair. If African-American motorists fear that they’ll be pulled over by the cops for “Driving While Black,” these kids worry about what will happen to them when “Applying While Asian.”

Studies have demonstrated that Asians are discriminated against in the admissions process — disadvantaged vis-à-vis other minorities and perhaps vis-à-vis whites. The Center for Equal Opportunity, a think tank opposed to racial preferences, in a 2005 study looked at a male applying to the University of Michigan from in state who had no parental connection to the school. If he had a 1240 SAT score and a 3.2 GPA, he had a 92 percent chance of admission if black and 88 percent if Latino. If white, he had only a 14 percent chance, and if Asian, a 10 percent chance.

Thomas Espenshade, co-author of “No Longer Separate, Not Yet Equal,” examined applicants to elite private schools with comparable grades, scores, athletic abilities and family histories. He concluded that whites were much more likely to get admitted than Asians.

This accounts for what must be the first mass effort of a minority group to “pass as white” since Jim Crow. If nothing else, you can see the emotional appeal of favoring black applicants over whites as a tiny, belated step toward making right a grave historical injustice. But what have Asian-Americans ever done to anyone else? Do the sons and daughters of Asian immigrants arrive on these shores and begin repressing Caucasians with their famously diligent studies and high test scores, such that the panjandrums of higher education must redress the imbalance?

All of this is done in the name of a “diversity” of a crude sort. The private California Institute of Technology doesn’t use quotas; its student body is 39 percent Asian. The University of California at Berkeley is forbidden by law from using quotas; its student body is more than 40 percent Asian. Only a bigot would believe that these schools are consequently worse learning environments.

The author of “The Price of Admission,” Daniel Golden, calls Asian-Americans “The New Jews,” a reference to the 20th-century quotas that once kept Jews out of top schools. The difference then was that Jews collectively didn’t stand for the policy. Stephen Hsu, a physics professor and an outspoken critic of current admission practices, laments that Asians seem strangely accepting of the unfair treatment. The official Asian-American groups tend to support anti-Asian quotas because they’re captives of liberal orthodoxy.

The Obama administration’s misnamed Justice Department has joined with its wishfully named Education Department to urge schools to get creative in circumventing Supreme Court limits on affirmative action. It’s not quite “Asians need not apply,” only that they should expect their ethnicity to be used against them should it become known to the authorities.