subject
Law, 01.12.2020 05:10 ryandelanomartinez

Utah College adopted a policy designed to produce a more diverse student body. Under the policy, the college uses a selection index on which an applicant may score a maximum of 150 points. Those whose point totals are 100 or above are certain to be admitted; those with fewer than 75 points are likely to be rejected; and those with between 75 and 99 points may or may not be accepted, the likelihood of admission increasing with their scores. Of the 150 possible points, up to 110 may be awarded for academic performance factors, including high school grade point average, standardized test scores, and quality of the high school. Up to 40 additional points may be assigned for other, non-academic factors, such as in-state residency, alumni relationships, personal essay, and personal achievement or leadership. Most of these nonacademic factors carry a low number of points (e. g. 3 for an outstanding essay, 5 for personal achievement or leadership, and 10 for in-state residency). However, any applicant who is an underrepresented minority receives 20 additional points. Is the Utah College student diversity policy constitutional under the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment? a)No, because race cannot be considered at all in college admissions.
b) Yes, because the policy does not reserve any seats for underrepresented minorities.
c) Yes, because obtaining a more diverse student body qualifies as compelling interest.
d) No, because race is weighed very heavily as a plus factor that is dispositive in most cases.

ansver
Answers: 3

Another question on Law

question
Law, 10.07.2019 23:40
Assignment: 01.06 review and critical thinking questions criminal
Answers: 2
question
Law, 15.07.2019 11:10
Why is dr. carla o'donnell visiting the jurisville police dept
Answers: 3
question
Law, 15.07.2019 23:10
You are a member of the parole board and you hear joe donovan's case. do you grant parole or not? support your answer with at least three supporting facts from the video.
Answers: 2
question
Law, 16.07.2019 17:20
Which best describes the basis for the right to privacy in the united states? a. the right to privacy is a civil liberty that places limits on government power through the constitution, especially the bill of rights. b. in griswold v. connecticut, the supreme court defined the right to privacy by incorporating the fourth amendment and the right of people to be secure; the self-incrimination clause of the fifth amendment; the ninth amendment; and the due process clause of the 14th amendment. c. the right to privacy is embodied in the words of u.s. justice louis brandeis, "the right to be left alone." d. the term privacy is not in the constitution or bill or rights but it does exist.
Answers: 1
You know the right answer?
Utah College adopted a policy designed to produce a more diverse student body. Under the policy, the...
Questions
question
Social Studies, 16.09.2021 02:20
question
Mathematics, 16.09.2021 02:20
Questions on the website: 13722362