The Tufts Daily - Tuesday, February 15, 2022

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T HE T UFTS DAILY

VOLUME LXXXIII, ISSUE 14

MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, MASS.

tuftsdaily.com

Tuesday, February 15, 2022

Admissions reiterates commitment to diversity despite affirmative action’s uncertain future by Ethan Steinberg News Editor

With the Supreme Court poised to consider the fate of affirmative action later this year, experts say the decision could have wide-reaching effects on the number of Black and Hispanic students admitted to selective schools. But administrators at Tufts said the possible end of affirmative action will not thwart the university’s commitment to building a student body that’s more diverse. Tufts is one of hundreds of selective schools to consider race in admissions, but officials affirmed applicants are given a “holistic” look that weighs dozens of factors, including academic and co-curricular accomplishments, identity and lived experience. “To achieve our mission as an institution and build the kind of community that we believe best prepares our students to go out into the world as active citizens, we need to be able to take into consideration the myriad iden-

tities and lived experiences of our applicants among very many factors,” JT Duck, dean of admissions, said in a statement. He added that admissions officers value the way an applicant uses the opportunities available to them. But the Supreme Court’s decision last month to hear a challenge to affirmative action sounded the alarm for some experts who fear the conservative-leaning body may rule against the use of race in admissions. Brought by the anti-affirmative action group Students for Fair Admission, the case accuses Harvard and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill of discriminating against white and Asian American applicants and giving preference to Black, Hispanic and Native American students. The Harvard case alleges the university violates Title VI, which forbids discrimination based on race in places that receive federal government funding. SFFA claims the elite university uses

AARON APOSTADERO / THE TUFTS DAILY

Bendetson Hall, the Office of Undergraduate Admissions, is pictured. subjective measures, like courage and kindness, as a basis for excluding some Asian Americans from admission. The case was filed in 2014 and SFFA has since lost twice: once in a trial court in 2019 and another time in a court of appeals in 2020. The second ruling prompted SFFA to file a petition last year calling on the top court to consider the suit,

Data Intensive Studies Center launches art datathon, discusses feminist data science by Evelyn Altschuler Staff Writer

On Feb. 11, the Data Intensive Studies Center launched its 2022 Art Datathon with a “What Does Feminist Data Science Look Like?” lecture from Catherine D’Ignazio, assistant professor of urban science and planning at MIT, director of the Data + Feminism Lab and co-author of the book “Data Feminism” (2020). D’Ignazio explained how feminist scholarship can be utilized to create more fair and ethical data practices, especially for marginalized communities. “‘Data Feminism’ … [is] a part of a growing body of work that’s looking to hold corporate and government actors accountable for basically making sexist, racist and classist data products,” D’Ignazio said. “So if you’ve been following the space at all, this is the space of algorithmic bias, fairness in artificial intelligence, ethics in machine learning.” D’Ignazio explained that data science isn’t necessarily neutral. Rather, it can be discriminatory and harmful.

“These are things like face detection systems that cannot see women of color, hiring algorithms that demote women’s resumes [and] child abuse detection algorithms that punish poor parents and many more examples” D’Ignazio said. By providing these examples of harmful technological practices, D’Ignazio argued that data feminism is powerful. “The basic argument that we make in the book is that intersectional feminism, when applied to the unequal balance of power in data science, can help that power be challenged, rebalanced and changed,” D’Ignazio said. D’Ignazio noted that there are seven principles of data feminism: examining power, challenging power, rethinking binaries and hierarchies, elevating emotion and embodiment, embracing pluralism, considering context and making labor visible. D’Ignazio illustrated the first principle, examining power, using “The Library of Missing Datasets” (2016), an art piece

by Mimi Onuoha. The piece documents missing datasets that Onuoha has identified, D’Ignazio said. “These are datasets that a reasonable person might expect to exist, but in fact, these are datasets that don’t exist — things like trans people killed or injured in instances of hate crimes, people excluded from public housing because of criminal records and so on,” D’Ignazio said. Over a period of multiple years, Onuoha — whose background is in journalism — kept a running list for each time she would encounter a missing dataset. Onuoha inserted folders titled with the missing datasets into a white filing cabinet. “You can go through the folders. … Of course, when you open up the folder, it’s empty,” D’Ignazio said. “The data are missing, there are no records in the data set. And so the point she is trying to make in this piece is that these datasets are missing for a reason.” The absence of certain datasets can be attributed to see DATATHON, page 2

despite repeated strong rulings against the plaintiffs. The case against UNC, a public school, accuses the university of violating the Equal Protection Clause and discriminating against white and Asian American applicants. The two cases will be considered together by the court. Affirmative action has been upheld repeatedly by the

Supreme Court, with the most recent ruling coming in 2016 in a lawsuit filed against the University of Texas. Since then, three Trump-appointed justices have joined the Supreme Court, shifting the court’s ideological balance rightward. One of the reasons affirmative action has continued to be see ADMISSIONS, page 2

TCU Senate allocates supplementary funding

by Tess Harmon

Assistant News Editor

The Tufts Community Union Senate heard supplementary funding requests on Sunday afternoon in the Sophia Gordon Hall Multipurpose Room. Following roll call, TCU Diversity Officer Jaden Pena opened the floor for updates from the Community and Diversity Committee. Asian American Community Senator Kristin Ng announced that she met with Kelly Shaw, nutrition specialist for Tufts Dining. According to Ng, a sophomore, Shaw wants to work with the cultural centers to inform better preparation of Asian cuisine. Ng will also be meeting with the Asian American Center to discuss plans for Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month. Africana Community Senator Hadiya Giwa announced that the Africana Advisory Alliance is working with the Tufts Bookstore to implement more items that the Black community might need. Giwa, a sophomore, also noted that Tufts Dining is working with the Muslim Students

FEATURES / page 3

OPINION / page 7

SPORTS / back

Lyndell’s Bakery: Sweeter than ever at 135 years

Stop penalizing COVID-19-related absences

Swim and dive makes waves at NESCAC Championship

Association to create options for the month of Ramadan. TCU Historian and Outreach Committee Chair Mariana JanerAgrelot then gave updates on the new TCU Senate logo. The Senate discussed options for creating the new logo, including employing an artist and hosting a competition. Next, TCU Treasurer Elizabeth Hom introduced 12 supplementary funding requests. Tufts Wind Ensemble requested $1,344 to fund a 30-person trip to a concert at the Boston Symphony Orchestra. The request passed with 17 senators voting in favor, none opposing and one abstaining. Tufts Financial Group requested $750 to fund their entry fee into the Venture Capital Investment Competition. The Allocations Board’s recommendation to fully fund the request passed by acclamation. The Bengali Students Association requested $1,300 to host events this spring, including International Mother Language Day and a mixer with Bostonarea schools. ALBO unanimously voted to fund the request and it passed by acclamation. see SENATE, page 2 NEWS

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