I mean if you think about it extracurriculars are also discriminatory. I’m at Oxbridge and I can 100% tell you that I have more access to extracurriculars than others at RG unis let alone non-RG unis, because of the college system its a lot less daunting to get involved/start ur own society, so eliminating that from the application process makes complete sense in my opinion. At the end of the day I believe graduate recruiting should be mostly based on motivation because if you have the motivation you can learn to do any job so by introducing extracurriculars ur adding a skills-based need which many can’t have access to/have difficulty accessing because of situations outside of their control
I'd tend to (partially) disagree. I went to a non-RG uni and simply did not have time to do all the extracurriculars on offer - and nor would any other human being to be honest. I went to state comprehensive school and couldn't afford things like music lessons etc. In fact, my school only paid and timetabled for students to do eight GCSEs - we had to pay to do any more than that. So, I did everything that was free - and I got a university "scholarship" as a high performance athlete without ever spending a penny on my sport (for the record, the "scholarship" was free gym membership and a hoody).
At my non-RG uni, I was on three society committees, I played for two sports teams, ran in multiple SU elections. I was part of a multitude of societies ranging from charitable to musical to academic to sporting. People can also take part in activities outside of their educational institutions. I've attended five universities in total and I don't think any universities struggle for extracurricular opportunities.
I think that there's a whole host of factors that impact whether someone can commit to extracurricular activities, and my opinion would be that the university you go to wouldn't play a massive role in that. Oxbridge aren't the only universities who have a college system and I wouldn't necessarily accept that a college system is less daunting regardless.
I think factors that massively impact whether someone can participate in extracurriculars include things like disability, caring responsibilities, the degree you do (like nursing would be very difficult to commit to things when you need to work placement shifts, for example), financials (someone studying in Swansea or Newcastle will have a lot more money for extracurriculars than someone having to afford rent somewhere like Oxford or Guildford).
In my opinion, graduate recruiters should and do view applications holistically. Someone who worked 40 hours per week but no extracurriculars is probably more favourable that someone who didn't work but attended a book club for one hour each week. Someone with no extracurriculars because they're a carer would and should be viewed differently from someone who simply chose not to participate in any.