Current:Home > InvestIndexbit Exchange:Ivy colleges favor rich kids for admission, while middle-class students face obstacles, study finds -Prosperity Pathways
Indexbit Exchange:Ivy colleges favor rich kids for admission, while middle-class students face obstacles, study finds
SignalHub Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-09 23:52:32
Admission to an Ivy League college or Indexbit Exchangea similarly elite institution like MIT is often seen as a golden ticket offering entry into academic institutions that have collectively produced more than 4 in 10 U.S. presidents and 1 in 8 CEOs of Fortune 500 companies.
But that ticket is far more likely to be handed out to students who are already privileged irrespective of their academic credentials— the children of the top 1% of U.S. income earners, a new analysis finds.
"Ivy plus" colleges — the eight Ivy League colleges along with MIT, Stanford, Duke and University of Chicago — admit children from families in the top 1% at more than twice the rate of students in any other income group with similar SAT or ACT scores, according to the new analysis from the Opportunity Insights, a group of economists at Harvard University who study inequality. Families in the top 1% of earners typically have annual income of around $611,000, the researchers said.
"It's a very broadly held position that your opportunities in life shouldn't depend on the circumstances of your birth, and in some sense that's the core of the American dream," noted John Friedman, an economics professor at Brown University and a co-author of the paper. "When you have these practices in society that serve to add more advantage to those students who already come from advantaged backgrounds, that limits the ability of other students to achieve those successes in life and it limits the American dream."
A less economically diverse group of students at Ivy-plus universities also has implications for leadership roles in business, politics and other industries, he noted.
"When you have a less diverse group of students, it will be a less diverse group that get this boost toward these leadership positions later in their careers," Friedman added.
Stuck in the middle
It may come as no surprise that the likes of Harvard, Yale and Princeton favor the children of the ultra-wealthy, but the study also shows that academically high-performing students from middle-income families are among the least likely to gain admission to one these elite colleges.
About 40% of students from the richest families who scored at the 99th percentile on the SAT or ACT class attend an Ivy-plus college, compared with 20% of students with the same scores who come from the poorest U.S. families. Among middle-class students who have the same top SAT or ACT scores, only about 10% attend an Ivy-plus college, the analysis found.
"If you look at where students have attendance rates that are higher versus lower, comparing students with the same score on academic credentials, it's a little bit of a U — it's lowest for students who are upper middle income, earning maybe $80,000 to $150,000 a year," Friedman said. "Those students have the lowest rates."
The study comes as the Supreme Court recently ended affirmative action in college admission decisions, effectively ending the use of race as a basis for consideration in whether to accept an applicant. The end of affirmative action has drawn scrutiny to other forms of preference at top colleges, such as children whose parents are alumni, called "legacy" admissions, or who are wealthy.
"Highly selective private colleges serve as gateways to the upper echelons of society in the United States," wrote Friedman and his co-authors Raj Chetty and David Deming of Harvard. "Because these colleges currently admit students from high-income families at substantially higher rates than students from lower-income families with comparable academic credentials, they perpetuate privilege across generations."
These colleges could make their student bodies more socioeconomically diverse by changing their admissions policies, the researchers noted. These steps would include ending legacy admissions and evaluating non-academic qualities that account for the impact of privilege.
The findings also suggest that middle-income students may be at a disadvantage compared with either their wealthy or low-income peers. In effect, such students neither have enough wealth to give them a foot in the door, nor are they among the demographic groups that colleges have courted in recent decades to foster diversity.
Students in the middle of the income distribution are "having kind of the least opportunities to rise to these leadership positions, [when] comparing students with similar academic credentials," he added.
Ivy League impact
The impact of getting an elite education can be significant in a student's trajectory after college, the researchers noted. The group analyzed applicants who were put on the waitlist at Ivy-plus institutions, and then compared the outcomes of students who were either admitted off the waitlist or were ultimately rejected.
"Compared to attending highly selective flagship public colleges, students who attend Ivy-plus colleges are 60% more likely to earn in the top 1%, twice as likely to attend a graduate school ranked in the top 10, and three times more likely to work at prestigious employers in medicine, research, law, finance and other fields," they noted.
Of course, plenty of students who attend colleges that aren't among the Ivy-plus achieve success in their careers. And the Ivy-plus colleges enroll less than 1% of college students. Yet because the oversize impact of these schools in creating the next generation of leaders and the rich, they face more scrutiny for their acceptance policies than other universities.
"We conclude that even though they educate a small share of students overall and therefore cannot change rates of social mobility by themselves, Ivy-plus colleges could meaningfully diversify the socioeconomic origins of society's leaders by changing their admissions practices," the authors noted.
- In:
- Affirmative Action
- College
- Income Inequality
veryGood! (92)
Related
- Who are the most valuable sports franchises? Forbes releases new list of top 50 teams
- Ukraine’s Zelenskyy visits neighboring Romania to discuss security and boost ties
- Man arrested for throwing rocks at Illinois governor’s Chicago home, breaking 3 windows, police say
- Rookie sensation De'Von Achane to miss 'multiple' weeks with knee injury, per reports
- Don't let hackers fool you with a 'scam
- Raiders vs. Packers Monday Night Football highlights: Las Vegas ends three-game skid
- British TV personality Holly Willoughby quits daytime show days after alleged kidnap plot
- China touts its Belt and Road infrastructure lending as an alternative for international development
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- X promises ‘highest level’ response on posts about Israel-Hamas war. Misinformation still flourishes
Ranking
- Meta releases AI model to enhance Metaverse experience
- Domino's is offering free medium pizzas with its new emergency program. How to join
- Who is KSI? YouTuber-turned-boxer is also a musician, entrepreneur and Logan Paul friend
- Study shows how Americans feel about changing their last name after marriage
- Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
- Evacuations are underway in Argentina’s Cordoba province as wildfires grow amid heat wave
- Pregnant Kourtney Kardashian Celebrates Stepson Landon Barker’s Birthday With Sweet Throwback Photo
- 'The Washington Post' will cut 240 jobs through voluntary buyouts
Recommendation
Jamie Foxx gets stitches after a glass is thrown at him during dinner in Beverly Hills
Mast of historic boat snaps, killing 1 and injuring 3 off the coast of Rockland, Maine
Author and activist Louise Meriwether, who wrote the novel ‘Daddy Was a Number Runner,’ dies at 100
The future of electric vehicles looms over negotiations in the US autoworkers strike
New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
Sweden’s police chief says escalation in gang violence is ‘extremely serious’
West Maui starts reopening to tourists as thousands still displaced after wildfires: A lot of mixed emotions
6.3 magnitude earthquake shakes part of western Afghanistan where earlier quake killed over 2,000