
The college admission scandal that involved big bribes, coaches and Hollywood actors grew out of a system that favors rich parents and gives coaches too much leeway in admissions.

By Dr. Rick Eckstein
Professor of Sociology
Villanova University
As part of the โOperation Varsity Bluesโ case that federal prosecutors announced March 12, dozens of people โ including Hollywood actresses and wealthy businessmen โ stand accused of having bought their childrenโs way into elite colleges and universities.
As a researcher who has studied how young athletes get admitted to college, I donโt see a major difference between this admission fraud case and how many wealthy families can buy their childrenโs way into elite colleges through โbackโ and โsideโ doors.
In my research, I show how most intercollegiate sports are fed by wildly expensive โpay to playโ youth sports pipelines. These pipelines systematically exclude lower income families. It takes money to attend so-called โshowcase tournamentsโ to get in front of recruiters.
In many ways, then, those ensnared in the current criminal case โ which alleges that they paid for their children to get spots on the sports teamsof big name schools โ couldnโt have succeeded if the college admissions process wasnโt already biased toward wealthier families.
Bypassing the front door
Even if college sports is taken out of the equation, the college admissions process already favors wealthy families in a variety of ways.
It has long been known that higher family income usually correlates with higher standardized test scores. There are many test prep companies, including some that guarantee higher scores for approximately US$1,000. Taking advantage of test prep may not be โfraud.โ But it certainly provides advantages to the wealthy that have little to do with academic merit.
In his book โThe Price of Admission,โ Daniel Golden highlights a number of other ways wealthy families can buy their way into elite universities. These include large donations, financing new buildings, creating endowments and playing on parentsโ celebrity status. These also have little to do with an applicantโs academic merit, but would never be considered criminal.
Sociologist David Karen has documented how attendance at expensive boarding schools gives wealthy students an admissions advantage to Ivy League universities. That may not be fraudulent, but it certainly seems unfair.
Athletics and admission advantages
So how do the wealthy get an advantage when it comes to college athletics? Research has shown that recruited athletes receive the largest admissions advantages independent of academic merit.
The advantage varies by sport and athletic division, but is almost universal within higher education. Many sports โ particularly squash, lacrosse, fencing and rowing โ are pricey to play, so rich kids get opportunities that are out of reach for the poor. Even non-elite sports such as soccer and softball are subject to class-based restrictions.

The Mellon Foundationโs report โCollege and Beyondโ found that recruited athletes with lower academic credentials get admitted at four times the rate of non-athletes with similar credentials.
Athlete screening
In the Varsity Blues case, some studentsโ parents essentially bought their childrenโs spot on a team. For instance, Stanford sailing coach John Vandemoer is charged with accepting contributions to the sailing program in exchange for recommending two prospective students. He pleaded guilty March 12.
How could a coach pull off this sleight of hand without drawing attention?
The answer, I believe, lies in the growing role of intercollegiate sports in adding some predictability to the very unpredictable enrollment process. Schools want to lock prospective students in as quickly as possible. College athletes are generally admitted through a schoolโs early decision process. As the proportion of admitted athletes increases, so does the proportion of locked-in applicants.
Colleges also benefit by admitting more students early since those people are not part of acceptance rate calculations. The result is a lower acceptance rate, which inflates the schoolโs perceived selectivity. This in turn spurs an increase in future applications, which further lowers the acceptance rate โ and again increases perceived selectivity โ without any objective changes in the actual quality of teaching and research.
College sports teams are an increasingly attractive venue for locking in these early admissions. It is not unusual to have 30 or 40 players on a college soccer or lacrosse team. Most will never play. Womenโs crew teams often have more than 100 rowers. Most will never get into a boat. Many will quit the team after one season but remain students.
Of course, because a family can afford to have their child play a sport doesnโt mean the student is a good athlete. The pipeline system is far better at identifying the best payers rather than the best players. Since scholarships are quite rare, it costs colleges almost nothing to have some bad players on the roster. And there are benefits.
Iโm certainly not defending the families and entrepreneurs at the heart of the Varsity Blues scandal for breaking the law to take advantage of a system already fraught with inequalities. The prosecutors in this case have insisted that โthere can be no separate admissions system for the wealthy.โ For that to be true, current practices that favor deep-pocketed families would have to be abandoned. That will require much more than prosecuting a few people who use their wealth to take advantage of an admissions process that already favors the rich.
Originally published by The Conversation, 03.13.2019, under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution/No derivatives license.
