Member News

At M.I.T., Black and Latino Enrollment Drops Sharply After Affirmative Action Ban

The Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s incoming class of 2028 saw a precipitous drop-off in the percentage of Black, Hispanic, Native American and Pacific Islander students, the university announced on Wednesday. It is M.I.T.’s first undergraduate class to be admitted since the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision last year banning affirmative action, and M.I.T. is the first major university to release statistics on the composition of its freshman class since the high court’s ruling. For the incoming class of 2028, about 16 percent of students are Black, Hispanic, Native American and Pacific Islander, compared with a baseline of about 25 percent of undergraduate students in recent years, the announcement said.


Read Full Article

More news from NAICU

  • Transylvania, UK forge alliance to help advance Kentucky
  • Planned Merger of Findlay and Bluffton Universities Nixed by Findlay
  • KC-area University President Leaves to Lead Utah School
  • Dr. Dean McCurdy Elected 10th President of Colby-Sawyer College
  • Potential Increase in Endowment Tax Has Private Universities on Alert
  • Pro-Palestinian Demonstrators Stage Sit-in at Barnard Over Expulsions
  • Back to Article Overview