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Supreme Court to revisit affirmative action in Texas case

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The top 10 percent law, recently amended to admit the top 8 percent of graduates, has not only boosted diversity, but it has also brought other benefits. Since the mid-1990s, the graduation rate at UT-Austin has risen steadily. Studies showed the graduates admitted under the law outperformed others with higher SAT scores.

“It’s had a profound impact. Before, about 10 percent of the high schools filled 75 percent of the freshman class seats here,” said law professor Gerald Torres. Two years ago, the campus announced that for the first time, a majority of its freshmen were minorities: Latinos, Asians or blacks.

And nearly all these new students earned admission solely because of their academic performance.

But because the top 10 percent law drove admissions, university officials said they would prefer more freedom to select students who were extraordinary or special. For example, a student with high SAT scores who wants to major in architecture, science or music may deserve admission, even if that student did not graduate at the top of the class, they said.

The university also says it wants to make room for minority students who did well in integrated high schools.

“The racial diversity (arising from automatic admission) is mostly a product of the fact that Texas high schools remain highly segregated,” university lawyers told the justices in briefs. Further, “the African American or Hispanic child of successful professionals in Dallas” who is not a top-tier graduate may be a better candidate for admission than a top graduate of a less-demanding high school with an “overwhelmingly Hispanic” or “overwhelming African American student body,” they said.

The Texas case is being closely watched by higher education leaders nationwide, many of whom worry the court is ready to strike down or scale back affirmative action.

Since the court upheld affirmative action at the University of Michigan, the author of that 5-4 decision, Justice Sandra Day O’Connor, has retired and been replaced by the more conservative Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. He and three other conservatives are likely to vote against use of “race conscious” admissions.

All eyes are again on Justice Anthony M. Kennedy, a centrist who has consistently opposed policies that rely on race. Dissenting in the Michigan case, he said the court should force “educational institutions to seriously explore race-neutral alternatives,” such as the top 10 percent law in Texas.

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