He recounted the involvement of one father and mother in their sonâs personal (hah!) essay, which they didnât trust him to ace himself. They drafted it, focusing of course on the hardship that he had overcome. But when they showed it to him, he spotted a minor problem. What theyâd described â his momâs difficult pregnancy, a sequence of visits to medical specialists, so much fear, so much suspense â predated his arrival in this world. Poignant as it was, he could take zero credit for it.
On Tuesday, the Justice Department announced the indictments of dozens of wealthy parents, including Emmy-winning actress Felicity Huffman, for employing various forms of bribery and fraud to get their kids into highly selective schools. Some allegedly paid college coaches, including at Yale and Stanford, to lie and say their children were special recruits for sports the kids didnât even play. Others allegedly paid exam administrators to let someone smarter take tests for their children. Millions of dollars changed hands.
Itâs a galling exposĂ© of widespread cheating by families who are already well-to-do and well-connected, but itâs not really a surprising one. Anyone who knows anything about the cutthroat competition for precious spots at top-tier schools realizes how ugly and unfair it can be: how many corners are cut, how many schemes are hatched, how big a role money plays, how many advantages privilege can buy.
The wrinkle here is that the schemes were actually criminal and will apparently be prosecuted, and for once the collegesâ administrators were in the dark about them. But theyâre versions of routine favor trading and favoritism that have long corrupted the admissions process, leeching merit from the equation.
It may be legal to pledge $2.5 million to Harvard just as your son is applying â which is what Jared Kushnerâs father did for him â and illegal to bribe a coach to the tune of hundreds of thousands of dollars, but how much of a difference is there, really? Both elevate money over accomplishment. Both are ways of cutting the line.
It may be legal to give $50,000 to a private consultant who massages your childâs transcript and perfumes your childâs essays, and illegal to pay someone for a patently fictive test score, but arenât both exercises in deception reserved for those who can afford them?
And while ghostwriting, whether by consultants or parents, may not be detectable or at least provable, it happens all the time and contributes to applications as bogus as the ones that came to federal prosecutorsâ attention.
What a message it sends to the children: Youâre not good enough to do this on your own. You neednât be. Your parents and your counselors know the rules, and when and how to break them. Just sit back and let entitlement run its course.
The Jared Kushner story was uncovered more than a decade ago by Daniel Golden, who showcased it in his 2006 book, âThe Price of Admission,â a definitive account of the strings pulled by rich families like Kushnerâs. Jared indeed got into Harvard, despite grades and test scores that were, according to Goldenâs reporting, well below what Harvard typically wants.
I spoke with Golden just after the Justice Department detailed the bribery and fraud scam, which he characterized as âan extreme outgrowth of what I wrote about.â
âI had a chapter about how the wealthy benefit from athletic preference because there are so many white patrician sports that most kids never get a chance to play,â he said. Indeed, inner-city schools arenât sending as many rowers or water polo players to the Ivy League as the storied boarding schools of New England.
Golden added that the affluent kids in the just-revealed scam seized an edge beyond that. âThey didnât even bother to get on the team,â he said.
They got away with it, the Justice Department charges, because coaches went along with it, accepting bribes. The people indicted by federal prosecutors or implicated in what happened worked at Wake Forest, the University of Southern California, Georgetown, UCLA and other prestigious schools. According to court documents, the former head coach of the womenâs soccer team at Yale pleaded guilty almost a year ago and became a cooperating witness who helped federal prosecutors gather evidence against others.
There are many takeaways from this appalling story. One is how crassly hypocritical parents can be. I bet that more than a few of those charged are proud liberals who talked about the importance of equal opportunity and an even playing field, then went out and did whatever it took to push their kids into the winnerâs circle. In this case, they doomed them, imparting garbage values and mortifying them in the process.
While colleges pledge fairer admissions processes and more diverse student bodies, they donât patrol whatâs going on with nearly enough earnestness and energy to honor that promise. Theyâre ripe to be gamed because the college admissions process is a game.
The spell that some of these colleges cast over applicants and their families â and the magic attributed to them â are absurd. But they are indeed part of an infrastructure of perks and packaging that isnât uniformly accessible.
When struggling Americans seethe at âthe elite,â they mean parents who exploit their station to try to guarantee it for their kids. They mean the self-regarding colleges that allowed that to happen.
When they say the system is rigged, they have this kind of wrongdoing â and the widely accepted and entirely legal shenanigans that are none too far from it â in mind. Our countryâs best schools are supposed to be engines of social mobility and the gateways to dreams. Sometimes theyâre just another sour deal.
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.