
Michael Wang was ranked second at James Logan high school in California, according to his grade point averages.
He had a perfect score on his ACT college exam, and a near-perfect score on his SAT, or Scholastic Aptitude Test. He was a national districts qualifier on the debate team. At the AMC 12 - a nationwide mathematics competition - he placed first in the state.
He performed with the San Francisco opera company, and sang in a choir that performed at Barack Obama’s first presidential inauguration. He volunteered his free time to tutor underprivileged children.
So when all the Ivy League schools to which he applied rejected him out of hand, he was, understandably, upset.
“I felt I was unfairly treated,” he said. “Of course receiving rejection letters was very sad, but at the same time I felt anger."
Wang’s parents emigrated from China. So when he saw friends who were not Asian American – and who had neither his near-perfect grades nor his wide range of extracurricular activities - being accepted to the same schools that rejected him, he wanted to know why.