In a letter to the university community on Wednesday, Wesleyan University President Michael Roth announced that legacy preferences in admissions would be eliminated.
The Middleton, Conn., school becomes the latest institution to change its policies in recent years and comes in the wake of the US Supreme Court’s June decision to end race-based affirmative action in college decisions.
If SCOTUS can upend decades of precedent to eliminate race-based selection, then certainly the courts and the schools can see how legacy preference – which overwhelmingly favors white applicants and gives a leg up to the wealthy over people from marginalized communities – should be abolished. Legacy preference is a large part of structural racism in the US.
Legacy preference in college admissions is necessary for the survival of the institutions that use them. Not only are legacy applicants more likely to enroll in the school – making for a smooth and certain admissions process — but they're also more likely to become donors who contribute to the endowments that keep private schools afloat. Whereas affirmative action had little benefit to schools, legacy preference is a school's lifeblood.