Front cover image for The chosen : the hidden history of admission and exclusion at Harvard, Yale, and Princeton

The chosen : the hidden history of admission and exclusion at Harvard, Yale, and Princeton

The author presents the findings of his survey of admissions at Princeton, revealing a century of exclusion that cuts to the core of the American experience, while raising questions about the stratification of higher education in America
eBook, English, 2005
Houghton Mifflin, Boston, 2005
History
1 online resource (viii, 711 pages : illustrations)
1029285332
Part I: The origins of selective admissions, 1900-1933
Elite education and the protestant ethos
The big three before selective admissions
Harvard and the battle over restriction
The "Jewish problem" at Yale and Princeton
Part II: The struggle over meritocracy, 1933-1965
Harvard's Conant: the man and his ideals
The reality of admissions under Conant
Reluctant reform comes to Yale
Princeton: the club expands its membership
Wilbur Bender and his legacy
Tradition and change at old Nassau
Yale: from insularity to inclusion
Part III: Inclusion and the persistence of privilege, 1965-2005
Inky Clark, Kingman Brewster and the revolution at Yale
Racial conflict and the incorporation of Blacks
Coeducation and the struggle for gender equality
The alumni revolt at Yale and Princeton
Diversity, the Bakke case, and the defense of autonomy
Money, the market ethos, and the struggle for position
The battle over merit
archive.org Free eBook from the Internet Archive
openlibrary.org Additional information and access via Open Library
archive.org Free eBook from the Internet Archive
openlibrary.org Additional information and access via Open Library