Wait, Did CNN Really Just Broadcast This Ahead of Trump's Attendance at the...
Wow. A Rare Solid Take From Whoopi Goldberg Regarding Trump Attending Tonight's Knicks...
What This Dem Rep Said About Trump Over the Weekend Is What Cost...
Idris Elba Argues Against 'Woke' James Bond
Did Talarico Just Flat-Out Lie About His Stance on This Issue?
Karen Bass Just Responded to Nithya Raman's Surge—and It Sounded a Lot Like...
There Is Another Reason We Can't Let Democrats Win the Midterms
Former Border Patrol Commander Greg Bovino Announces Exploratory Move Ahead of 2028
James Talarico Undergoes Political Reassignment Surgery During His Latest Interview
Trump Officially Taps Acting AG Todd Blanche to Head Justice Department
Defense Rests Case After Shocking Day in Karmelo Anthony Trial
Trump Wants the Senate Parliamentarian Axed. Here's A Look Inside That Debate.
About That 'Bombshell' Endorsement James Talarico Got Today
Deranged Man Re-Enacts Charlie Kirk's Murder Outside of TPUSA Women's Summit Hosted by...
Obama-era Judge Shoots Down Key Trump H-1B Visa Policy
OPINION

Quit Whining and Study

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Quit Whining and Study

Everyone in our region and many beyond has heard of Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology (TJ). A public magnet school in Fairfax County, Va., it is always rated among the top 10 or 20 high schools in the nation -- and it packs off scads of students to the most selective colleges every year. Admission is highly competitive. Last year, more than 2,500 eighth-graders applied for 485 seats in the freshman class.

Advertisement

It was considered front-page news in this week's Washington Post that for the first time, TJ's incoming class will have a plurality of Asian-Americans at 45 percent. White students will comprise 42 percent, while African-American and Hispanic students will make up two percent each (the rest are called "other"). All students in Fairfax County (and some in surrounding regions) are eligible to apply, and the corresponding ethnic percentages in the county are white (67.9 percent), black (9.9 percent), Asian (15.9 percent), and Hispanic (12.9 percent). These ethnic categories are not hard and fast. The Hispanic category, for example, can include people of any skin color providing their ancestry is from the Spanish-speaking world. And a certain number of students at Thomas Jefferson (bless them) decline to identify themselves ethnically at all.

But in these touchy times, this sort of news is bound to ruffle feathers. The Post story suggests that the Fairfax County School Board is planning to review the school's admission policy. A spokesman told me that they are always reviewing their admission criteria. There are periodic complaints that too few blacks and Hispanics are admitted, and now perhaps some members of the white majority will whine that more of their darlings should be offered those plum spots. The game of racial and ethnic spoils has no rules and no limits. If it's a contest of who can shout the loudest or apply the most pressure, there is no logical end of the corruption that is possible.

Advertisement

As a parent of white male students in Fairfax County, I've had occasion to size up the competition. Attending the awards ceremony in the spring at our high school (not TJ) for example, the Asian students carried off a huge number of the awards in nearly all subjects and completely flattened everyone else in math and science. It's so unfair. These Asian students, some of whom only arrived in this country within the past 10 years, combine natural ability with prodigious work habits. As Stephen and Abigail Thernstrom reported in their book "No Excuses," "Only a quarter of white students in middle school spend more than an hour daily on homework, but half of all Asian-American children do so." The authors quote an Asian immigrant child as explaining, "Every day (our parents) tell us 'Obey your teachers. Do your schoolwork. Stay out of trouble. You're there to learn, not to fight. Keep trying harder. Keep pushing yourself. Do your homework. After you have done that you can watch TV.'"

And how does America reward these hard-working students? We've erected barriers to their advancement. At every level of higher education, informal quotas keep the number of Asian students down.

Advertisement

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement