Jason Fong, right, with a wrestling teammate

Originally published here at 18MillionRising.org

by Jason Fong

I am lucky. In the lottery of life, I have hit the jackpot. I have

scratched off my ticket and won the prize of college-educated parents. I

live in a safe neighborhood, and I am fortunate enough to attend a

local high school that celebrates diversity of all kinds, fosters

excellence, and supports all of its students. Thanks to the diversity of

the student population, I have become a better student and a more

informed citizen of California. That’s why I support the Senate

Constitutional Amendment Number 5 (SCA5).

SCA5 is the California Senate’s attempt to repeal parts of 1996’s

Proposition 209, which barred race-based admissions policies in

California’s public universities. The purpose of SCA5 is to increase the

numbers of Latinos, African Americans and other members of

underrepresented groups on California’s campuses.1

Unfortunately, SCA5 has stopped at the steps of the California State

Assembly. The Democrats in the state legislature have given up their

efforts to bring the issue to the voters in November.2

SCA5 raised the ire of some Asian American organizations who felt it

would hurt Asian American applicants by decreasing the available spots

on college campuses. Some, such as the 80-20 National Asian American

Political Action Committee, have gone so far as to say that “SCA5 is

a ‘Yellow Peril Act’, a 21st century version of the ‘Chinese Exclusion

Act of 1882’, aimed specifically to impose a quota-like ceiling on the

AsAm students....”3 This sort of rhetoric might be

effective in rousing up supporters, but it both misrepresents the

intended purpose of SCA5, which is to work towards greater access for

underrepresented groups in higher education, and minimizes the ugliness

and racism of some aspects of US public policy.

Let’s look beyond the inflammatory rhetoric at the numbers. What does

a UC campus really look like today? One of the jewels of the University

of California system is UC Berkeley, and my mom’s alma mater. In the

fall of 2013, Berkeley’s class of first year students is made up of

14-15% of underrepresented ethnicities. Within this group, there were

133 African Americans (2.8%), 530 Latino/Chicano/Hispanic students

(11.4%), 18 Native Americans (0.4%), and 8 Pacific Islanders (0.2%). The

889 Chinese American students represented 18.9% of the freshman class,

while 249 Korean Americans represented 5.3% of the entering

class. Whites comprised about the same number of Korean and Chinese

American students combined, about 24.8% of the class. Asian Americans

represented almost 40% of the entering class in the fall of 2013.4

UC Berkeley’s class of 2017 clearly does not look like

California. This year, 39% of Californians identify as Latino, 38.8% are

white, 5.8% are African American, and about 13% are Asian or Pacific

Islander.5 This incongruity leads to the question: will

future generations of Californians be equipped with the education to

support the state’s health? Is keeping higher education inaccessible to

the majority of Californians an effective way to ensure a robust

future? According to the Institute for the Study of Societal Issues at

UC Berkeley, “college completion would represent far and away the best

investment return for both individuals and the state. The next

generation of college graduates will contribute significantly to the

future of the state and its residents….”6 If we don’t ensure that California’s population has access to higher education, what will happen to our state?

While the student body need not be an exact mirror of the state’s

population, as a state, we need to do a better job of educating students

from underrepresented communities while ensuring that all communities

feel heard and respected. Even within the Asian Pacific Islander

American community, we need to be doing a better job of providing

representation for Pacific Islanders and Southeast Asians in higher

education. At UC Berkeley, the rate of admission of Pacific Islanders is

even lower than the rate for underrepresented ethnicities as a whole.7

Many opponents of SCA5 argue that fairness demands that university

admissions be based on merit alone. By merit, they are referring to

applicants’ grade point averages (GPAs) and standardized test

scores. This is appealing because it provides a simple proxy for

intelligence and “worth,” which works out well for some members of the

Asian American community, like me. I know what I need to do to meet

these standards because my family and teachers provide me with the

information, means, and expectations to do so. Thus, under this system, I

have a clear advantage. And that’s why this merit-based system isn’t as

fair as it may seem. If you come from a family of college-educated

people, you have more knowledge about the college application

process. You know about the SAT, the ACT, and test prep courses. You

know about AP classes. You know how the system works. But if even grades

and test scores were absolutely fair, they would still fall woefully

short as they don’t account for a large portion of what students have to

offer, such as their life experiences and their ability to overcome

obstacles. While GPA and test scores are important (just ask my

parents), these numbers are inadequate measures of ability, character,

and potential.

How do I know this? On a daily basis, teachers from many different

communities and perspectives expand my mind with ideas that defy simple

quantification. I sit next to students from various socio-economic,

linguistic, and religious communities that demand that I expand my

outlook beyond textbooks. At my school, 10% of my fellow students are

Asian, 48% are white, 25% are Latino, and 10% are African American;

22.9% are from economically disadvantaged backgrounds; and 7.4% are

English language learners.8 I benefit in ways that I couldn’t if we

were all from similar circumstances, and when I eat lunch with my

friends, fool around in the hallways, and wrestle with my teammates, I

share failures, plan schemes, and dream big with them all.

Some might say that I am arguing against my own self-interest. But

I -- an Asian American of Chinese and Korean descent and a son of the great

state of California -- am actually a beneficiary of the type of community

that can be built by measures like SCA5. I am one of the lucky ones.

Unfortunately, thanks to the California assembly, students at our public

universities can’t say the same.

***

Jason Fong is 14 years old and a 9th grader at Redondo Union High School in Redondo Beach, California.

References

[Full disclosure: Hyphen's Managing Blog Editor Cynthia Brothers has worked as a consultant with 18MillionRising.org]