Washington – more than 50 universities are investigated due to the alleged racial discrimination as part of President Donald Trump, Equity and Entainidad who said his officials in White and Asian Americans.
The Education Department announced new investigations on Friday, one month after a memo warns America schools in “race-based or any aspects of student life.
“Students should be investigated according to merit and reaching, not affirming the color of their skin,” as a statement. “We don’t give this credit.”
Most newly-focused questions with Colleges with PHD projects, a nonprofit that helps students from non-business replacement businesses.
Department officials say that the qualifying group limit is based on the race and those colleges with it is to “participate in graduate practices in their graduate programs.”
The group of 45 colleges facing PhD project check includes major universities such as Arizona State and Rutiger, Cornell, Duke and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
A statement from the state of Ohio said the university “does not discriminate on the basis of racial, ethnic or any other protected classes, and our programs are protected open to all qualified applicants.”
A message sent to the PhD Project not immediately returned.
Six other colleges are investigated for providing a race-based scholarship, “the department said, and the other accused of running a program that changed students based on the basis of race-based students.
The Education Department said Those schools are: Grand Valley State University, Ithaca College, the New England College of Optometry, the University of Alabama, the University of Minnesota, the University of South Florida and the University of Oklahoma and Tulsa.
An initial release of press from the education department that is wrongly identified the University of Tulsa as one of the schools checked.
February 14 Memo from the Republican Administration of Trump’s Republican is a development of a 2023 Supreme Court decision using the race as a cause of admissions.
This decision focuses on Harvard and University of North Carolina’s government policies, but the educational department says that the rules based on the education race, K-12 education.
In Memo, Craig Travelor, acting on civil assistant for civil rights, say diffrent stereotypes and clear stereotypes and explicit stereotypes of racing, programming and discipline. “
Memo challenges federal cases from two largest teachers’ unions. Suitings say that the memo is not very clear and violates the free rights to tell teachers.