Affirmative Action and Academic Performance
The State of Things | WUNC
w/ Frank Stasio
A new study
about racial differences in academic performance at Duke University is
creating controversy – and it isn’t even published yet. Duke economist
Peter Arcidiacono and his colleagues reported that African-American
students are more likely to change from being math and science majors to
programs in the humanities or social sciences at a higher rate than
their white counterparts.
The study also suggests that the switch to
less rigorous majors was largely responsible for why the grade point
averages of black undergraduates ultimately became comparable to GPAs of
white students as they progressed through school. Duke’s Black Student
Alliance organized a protest in reaction to the research and the study
has drawn heated reactions from others in the Duke community.
Host Frank
Stasio reviews the report and the response to it with Arcidiacono, a
professor of economics at Duke; William “Sandy” Darity, chair of Duke’s
African and African-American Studies Department and Arts and Sciences
Professor of Public Policy, and Economics; and Nana Asante, a Duke
senior and president of the university’s Black Student Alliance.
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