Bo-Kyung Byun

The overwhelming majority of literature on college admissions portrays admissions officers as making admissions decisions based on systematic assessments of applicants’ credentials, high school context, and sociodemographic traits. These studies assume that admissions officers’ decisions are driven by the characteristics of applicants themselves rather than those of the admissions officers evaluating them. My research, on the other hand, draws attention to the sociodemographic makeup of the U.S. admissions workforce (70% White) and its potential consequences for equity and racial diversity in admissions outcomes. Drawing upon Lipsky’s theory of street-level bureaucracy and the sociological literature on repertoires of evaluation, I will conduct qualitative interviews with admissions officers working at selective higher education institutions across the country to examine the question: How do admissions officers’ own racial identities and lived experiences shape how they evaluate admissions files?