AUSTIN, Texas
Texas students who graduate in the top 10 percent of their high school class would no longer be guaranteed automatic admission to a public university under a bill that passed a Senate panel Wednesday.
The legislation, passed 4-1 out of the Senate Higher Education Committee, would cap top 10 percent admissions to 50 percent of a school’s entering freshman class.
The bill has strong backing from the University of Texas, where more than 80 percent of current freshmen gained admission through the automatic-entry guarantee.
Sen. Florence Shapiro, R-Plano, sponsor of the cap legislation, said talented musicians and would-be scientists are going elsewhere because they can’t get into UT.
“It has caused many of our very good students that are in the 12th or 15th or even 20th place to go on to other universities, to go out of state, in order to meet their needs,” she said. “It’s a brain drain.”
Practically speaking at UT, the bill would mean that only students graduating in the top 6 to 8 percent would be guaranteed admission under current trends, Shapiro said. It only affects colleges that admit 50 percent or more of entering freshmen under the automatic guarantee provisions.