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Without affirmative action, elite colleges are prioritizing economic diversity in admissions

WASHINGTON (AP) 鈥 Some of the country鈥檚 most prestigious colleges are enrolling record numbers of low-income students 鈥 a growing admissions priority in the absence of .

America’s top campuses remain crowded with wealth, but some universities have accelerated efforts to reach a wider swath of the country, recruiting more in urban and rural areas and offering free tuition for students whose families are not among the highest earners.

The strategy could lead to friction with the federal government. The , which has from elite colleges over a range of grievances, has suggested it鈥檚 illegal to target needier students. College leaders believe they鈥檙e on solid legal ground.

At Princeton University, this year’s freshman class has more low-income students than ever. One in four are eligible for federal , which are scholarships reserved for students with the most significant financial need. That’s a leap from two decades ago, when fewer than 1 in 10 were eligible.

鈥淭he only way to increase socioeconomic diversity is to be intentional about it,” Princeton President Christopher Eisgruber said in a statement. 鈥淪ocioeconomic diversity will increase if and only if college presidents make it a priority.鈥

Last year, Princeton set aggressive goals to recruit more low-income students in the wake of the in higher education. Without the ability to consider race, officials wrote in a campus report, focusing on economic diversity offers 鈥渢he university鈥檚 greatest opportunity to attract diverse talent.”

The country’s most selective colleges still enroll large proportions of students from 1% of American families. Many of those campuses have tried for years to shed reputations of elitism, with only gradual changes in enrollment.

Colleges set records for enrollment of low-income students

Only a small fraction of the nation鈥檚 colleges have publicly disclosed their low-income enrollments this year, and national data won鈥檛 be released by the federal government until next year. But early numbers show a trend.

At 17 highly selective colleges that have released new data, almost all saw increases in Pell-eligible students between 2023 and this year, according to an Associated Press analysis. Most saw increases in consecutive years, and none saw a significant decrease in aggregate over the two years.

Yale, Duke, Johns Hopkins and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology all have set enrollment records for Pell-eligible students in the past two years.

Part of the uptick owes to a federal expansion that made more students eligible for Pell grants last year. But campus leaders also believe the increases reflect their own efforts.

The numbers in MIT鈥檚 freshman class have climbed by 43% over the past two years, and low-income students account for more than a quarter of this year鈥檚 class. MIT officials cited its policy providing free tuition for families that earn less than $200,000 a year.

鈥淢IT has always been an engine of opportunity for low-income students, and we are dedicated to ensuring we can make an MIT education accessible for students from every walk of life,” Stu Schmill, MIT鈥檚 dean of admissions, said in a statement.

Nationwide, roughly a third of undergraduate students have received Pell grants in recent years.

Two years ago, Amherst College in Massachusetts made tuition free for students in the bottom 80% of U.S. earnings. It also started covering meals and housing for those below the median income, and it stopped prioritizing and donors in admissions decisions. Since then, low-income enrollment has risen steadily, reaching 1 in 4 new students this year.

At the same time, the admissions office has stepped up recruiting in overlooked parts of the country, from big cities to small towns.

鈥淲hen we go out and talk to students, it鈥檚 not in the fanciest ZIP codes,” said Matthew McGann, dean of admissions. 鈥淚t鈥檚 in places where we know there鈥檚 a lot of talent but not a lot of opportunity.鈥

Racial diversity does not necessarily follow economic diversity

On many campuses, officials hoped the focus on economic diversity would preserve racial diversity 鈥 Black, Hispanic and Indigenous Americans have the country’s highest poverty rates. But even as low-income numbers climb, many elite campuses have seen racial diversity decrease.

Without the emphasis on income, those decreases might have been even steeper, said Richard Kahlenberg, a researcher at the Progressive Policy Institute who advocates for class-based affirmative action. He called the latest Pell figures 鈥渁 significant step in the right direction.鈥

鈥淓conomic diversity is important in its own right,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t’s important that America鈥檚 leadership class 鈥 which disproportionately derives from selective colleges 鈥 include people who’ve faced economic hardships in life.鈥

Swarthmore College saw the most dramatic leap in Pell enrollment, jumping from 17% to 30% last year.

While many campuses were delaying scholarship decisions until the government resolved , Swarthmore used other data to figure out applicants鈥 financial need. That allowed Swarthmore to offer scholarships to students while they were still awaiting decisions from other schools.

More financially disadvantaged students ended up enrolling at Swarthmore than officials expected. College leaders also credit their work to reduce campus costs 鈥 laundry is free and students get yearly credits for textbooks, for example.

Yet Swarthmore saw its Black enrollment fall to 5% of its freshman class this year, down from 8% the year before.

鈥淚n a race neutral environment, those numbers are likely to drop,” Jim Bock, the admissions dean, said in a statement. 鈥淣ot all minority students are low-income, and not all majority students have significant financial means.”

The approach risks federal scrutiny

In legal memos, the White House has alleged that prioritizing students based on earnings or geography amounts to a 鈥渞acial proxy鈥 in violation of the Supreme Court’s 2023 decision against affirmative action.

In a June letter, Trump officials accused the University of California-Los Angeles of 鈥渞ace-based admissions in all but name.” It criticized UCLA for considering factors like applicants’ family income, ZIP code and high school profile.

Colleges often weigh that kind of information in admissions decisions. Yet the Trump administration has declared that the Supreme Court decision outlaws a wide range of long-accepted education practices, including scholarships targeting students in underserved areas.

Already, there are signs of an impact.

Earlier this year the College Board 鈥 the nonprofit that oversees the SAT 鈥 suddenly discontinued an offering that gave admissions offices a wealth of information about applicants, including earnings data from their neighborhoods.

Kahlenberg and others see it as a retreat in the face of government pressure. The College Board offered little explanation, citing changes to federal and state policy around the use of demographic information in admissions.

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