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Saturday, October 25, 2025

The new class of freshmen has fewer Black and Hispanic students for the second year since the Supreme Court ended affirmative action in college admissions.

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The freshman class at Harvard University has fewer Black, Hispanic and international students than last year, a change in diversity that comes after the Trump administration launched a wide-ranging attack to try to force the school to end DEI policies.

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-- The Washington Post (@washingtonpost.com) Oct 23, 2025 at 10:30 AM

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The article seems to be a summary.

Here's one that is a bit longer ...

Harvard says latest freshman class is more Asian, less Black
www.union-bulletin.com

... Harvard University reported admissions data showing that the share of Asian American students in its freshman class rose while the percentage of Black students fell for the second straight year.

Asian American students make up 41% of the latest group of first-year students at Harvard College, up from 37% a year earlier, according to a report released Thursday. The share of freshmen identifying as Black or African American fell to 11.5% from 14%, while Hispanic or Latino students dropped to 11% from 16%. The data are self-reported.

The figures mark the second full enrollment cycle since the U.S. Supreme Court's 2023 ruling that struck down race-conscious admissions. Harvard was a named defendant in that case, in which the school was accused of discriminating against Asian American applicants. While Harvard denied the allegation, the court decision forced it and other universities to overhaul how they consider applicants' backgrounds and experiences " without using race as a factor.

"Amidst several seismic shifts in higher education admissions over the past few years, as well as the effects of Covid, the Class of 2029 enters Harvard as worthy successors to the generations of students who've come before them," William Fitzsimmons, dean of admissions and financial aid, said in the statement. ...


#1 | Posted by LampLighter at 2025-10-25 12:27 AM | Reply

"more Asian"
Republicans are looking to Trump to fix this problem, the same way he fixed Koreans building a factory for Americans to work in.

Remember when Republicans loved Roof Koreans?
Now Republicans hate Koreans.
The American Dream is over.

#2 | Posted by snoofy at 2025-10-25 12:32 PM | Reply

7 out of 10 people on the planet are Asian... bwahahahahahahaha...
There you go... problem solved

#3 | Posted by RightisTrite at 2025-10-25 02:23 PM | Reply

The American Dream is over.
#2 | POSTED BY SNOOFY

Agreed, the American Dream: a legacy of meritocracy
www.campustimes.org

Harvard is denying admission to students with perfect SAT scores and AP calculus credit, while admitting students who need remedial math.

Agreed, even after the Federal government gets involved Harvard still can't live up to the dream.

#4 | Posted by oneironaut at 2025-10-25 11:28 PM | Reply

Read the link. Possibly the most pompous pile of -------- I have seen in years.

Could have been written by Charles Emmerson Winchester III.

Harvard is denying admission to students with perfect SAT scores and AP calculus credit, while admitting students who need remedial math.

I hope that link wasn't supposed to support that comment.

#5 | Posted by REDIAL at 2025-10-25 11:43 PM | Reply

So the minorities at Harvard actually meet the qualifications to get in just like all the other students - GOOD, as that is the way it should be. : )

#6 | Posted by MSgt at 2025-10-26 02:07 PM | Reply

What is it with Trumpers consistently vying to be the biggest piece of shht in America?

#7 | Posted by ClownShack at 2025-10-26 02:09 PM | Reply

__________
Asian American students make up 41% of the latest group of first-year students at Harvard College, up from 37% a year earlier, according to a report released Thursday. The share of freshmen identifying as Black or African American fell to 11.5% from 14%, while Hispanic or Latino students dropped to 11% from 16%.

The figures mark the second full enrollment cycle since the U.S. Supreme Court's 2023 ruling that struck down race-conscious admissions. Harvard was a named defendant in that case, in which the school was accused of discriminating against Asian American applicants. While Harvard denied the allegation, the court decision forced it and other universities to overhaul how they consider applicants' backgrounds and experiences " without using race as a factor.

Not really surprising, as Asian-Americans of all means put a strong emphasis on education and have been willing to pay premium to invest in what they think are the best of it - and it's been paying off for them.

2022 US Median Household Income by racial categories

2000-2017 Real Median Household Income by Race

More detailed breakdown:

Income by race and ethnicity 2023 (Household and Per Capita)


The issue is not really about "minorities" (or "protected minority / protected class") unless Asian-Americans are no longer considered minority group. In Harvard, at 41% as a group, they alone are larger than Whites. In the finite world of academic institution's enrollment, it will crowd out some other groups.

It also explains why a larger percentage of them - like many successful (or aspiring) Latinos and Blacks - have been becoming more conservative.
__________

#8 | Posted by CutiePie at 2025-10-28 06:09 AM | Reply

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