<p>Please read this entire paragraph, it’s not as empty as the next sentence will make it seem. Florida says that it uses many factors to admit applicants. Your data shows the the average URM applicant scores lower than the average Asian applicant. It also shows that the average admitted student of each race scores higher than the average rejected student of the same race. If the average applicant of all races does comparably well in the other factors influencing admission, you would expect that a wide range of applicants from each racial group would be accepted. The SAT factor, when combined with the other factors, would result in both (a) a larger gap between the accepted and rejected SAT scores within the lower-scoring group and (b) a higher overall acceptance rate for the higher-scoring group.</p>
<p>Both of these are shown to be true in your data. Of course, it’s possible that AA is happening. It’s also possible that it’s not.</p>
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You might do a bit better on the GMAT if you knew what “mutually exclusive” meant.</p>