How is this not still discriminatory? Unless you are recruiting based on talent alone, and as long as you are targeting based on race, you are discriminating.
Just because you find competent people to fill your positions doesnt mean you didnt do it in a discriminatory manner. The old bigotted white and male only system usually filled spots with qualified candidates as well.
Sure. But again, you are operating on the assumption that the only thing that matters or should matter is GPA and test scores. Or that the difference between scoring at the 95th percentile is significantly different than scoring at the 94th percentile. Or the 90th or 99th percentile.
If the only thing that matters is test scores, a university has a student body full of great test takers. This is not the same thing as great thinkers or great future doctors, lawyers, accountants (ok, maybe accountants), teachers, etc.
A person who scores very high on the SAT or ACT may have scored so well because he/she is very intelligent and is very talented academically. Or may have scored very highly because his or her mommy and daddy paid for years of cram courses starting in middle school, scheduled every single minute of his/her day from infancy on, to ensure there would be no distractions and no bad influences (i.e. things which wouldn't beef up a college resume, er application) in their child's life. Because their child would of course be a doctor or an engineer! Even if he preferred to dance. Or paint. Or teach elementary school.
You are an admissions counselor. You have before you 3 applications for the remaining spot.
One applicant scored in the top 3 percent of the SAT and also the ACT, only one of which was necessary. They graduated first in their prep school class. They wrote an essay filled with quotes from well known scientists. You know that they were admitted to an Ivy already but their application says your school is their first choice. During their interview, they answer in one word sentences, do not make eye contact, seem distracted. Their parents are both waiting in the outer office, on the edge of their chairs.
The second applicant scored in the top 5 percent of the SAT and did not take the ACT which is ok: it wasn't required. Also graduated top of their class at their small, private school. Their college application is filled with stellar 'activities, including editor of student newspaper, several service organizations, marching band, lead in the school musical for 3 years running. During the interview, this student talks animatedly about all of his/her achievements thus far and about how s/he intends to win a Nobel in Chemistry and intends to go to medical school at Harvard.
The third applicant scored in the top 8 percent of the SAT, no ACT and graduated in the top 10 percent of their class, which was a large competitive urban school. In addition to a few of the usual extracurriculars, this student held a part time job at a local convenience store, helped care for younger siblings, and also started a literacy program that targeted older immigrants who hang out at the local park. This student is polite and well spoken and asks about opportunities for study abroad, diversity at the university, and the strength of several programs.
Which student do you admit?