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Petr
01-17-2006, 12:44 AM
http://www.spokesmanreview.com/breaking/story.asp?ID=5776


Students choosing not to report ethnicity

By Shawn Vestal
Staff writer
January 14, 2006


When Rae-Lynn Conger, a junior at Eastern Washington University, is asked to identify her race on forms or applications, she checks an increasingly popular box: Other.

It's not that Conger doesn't know which box is correct. She just objects to the premise that her race ¡V she's white ¡V is considered at all.

"My main rationale for doing it is that I don't believe my ethnicity or my gender has any bearing on my potential as a person," said Conger, an Omak, Wash., native who's president of the campus Republican group.

Conger and other "others" are one of the fastest-growing categories of students, as universities try to measure and increase their enrollments of ethnic minorities. As the figures rise, some university officials have suggested that a part of the reason is the increase of multiracial students or others who don't see their specific circumstances reflected in the five broad categories used in higher education ¡V white, African American, Native American, Asian American and Hispanic.

A new report suggests that a lot of the "unknowns" are actually white ¡V at least in the three schools surveyed in California ¡V and that the increase in that category is masking an even larger imbalance of racial makeup in the country's colleges and universities. The report, issued by the James Irvine Foundation, calls for better statistics to measure progress.

"With this more accurate data, we will have not only a better sense of the true racial/ethnic composition of our colleges and universities, but also a better gauge of the access various students have to, and the success they have through, higher education," the report says.

During the 1990s, the percentage of American college students who chose not to report their race or ethnicity nearly doubled, from 3.2 percent to 5.9 percent. The pattern is even more pronounced at Washington State and Eastern Washington universities, where the percentage of students who didn't report an ethnic category in 2005 was 9.5 percent and 13.2 percent, respectively.

At the University of Idaho, the figure has stayed fairly level over the last decade. However, at 7.8 percent, it's a bigger portion of the student population than the 7 percent of identified minorities. At Gonzaga University in Spokane, the percentage of unknown students is at 7.6 percent ¡V up slightly from recent years.

The increase, and the recent findings in the California survey, suggests to some that the students are playing the "race game," hiding their whiteness in an age of intense focus on multiculturalism. On the Web site Inside Higher Ed, comments attached to a story about the study consistently focused on the "disadvantage" of being white in college admissions.

"Being white is not widely perceived to be an advantage, so why make it easy to be identified as ¡¥just another white kid,'ƒ|" one writer said.

Another wrote, "I would be willing to bet a huge percentage of those who chose not to identify their race were not only white, but male."

Francisco Salinas, the head of the UI's Office of Multicultural Affairs, said he's seen a different motivation for checking the "other" box. Some people just don't see themselves ¡V their specific ethnicities ¡V reflected in the five categories.

"If I'm Puerto Rican, I may be very proud to be Puerto Rican and don't want to be subsumed into an umbrella population" of Hispanics, he said.

Similarly, many Native Americans pride themselves on their tribal affiliations, which aren't reflected in the figures either. Sometimes the university is charged with administering a scholarship for a Basque student or a member of a certain tribe ¡V and the university's categories provide no help there.

"For what we're trying to do, it is nearly that point where we maybe need a more refined tool," he said.

For many university officials, the unreported category has been seen as a likely place for multiracial students to identify themselves ¡V and some have suggested that minority enrollments are actually higher than they seem for this reason.

"This study directly challenges that assumption and primes the field for further research in this area," says the new report.

The report is limited and may not be applicable to all colleges. The foundation studied enrollment at three private California colleges, comparing data provided by students at two different times ¡V when they applied and during their first year in school.

In the survey of first-year students, researchers consistently found more white students and fewer unknowns than they did in the applications. The percentage of white students in the first-year survey were between 14 and 28 percentage points higher than those in the applications.

"While there is variation among the three campuses in this study, overall, the results suggest that a sizeable portion of students in the unknown category are white, in addition to multiracial students who may have selected white as one of their categories," the report says.

It also says that individual institutions and the country's overall network of higher education need to improve accounting of ethnic diversity. The report notes that the use of unknown categories lets colleges distort their demographic makeup; the authors cite examples where minority students were disappointed when they arrived on campus, because there were fewer minority students than admissions statistics had shown.

Conger said that she understands the interest in diversity among university officials, but she believes categorizing people by race or gender is simplistic and unfair. The College Republicans hosted an "affirmative action bake sale" at EWU last year, which offered different prices on items to different races, in an effort to satirize the impact of affirmative action, she said.

Salinas said he knows that there's a reaction against diversity efforts among some students and members of the general population, but it's important for universities to ensure they're representative of the population at large ¡V something regional universities don't do for many ethnic populations.

He said the five-category system has flaws and will likely see some revisions in the future.

"We need more refinement of the tools," he said. "That's not to say the tools haven't been useful."

Petr
01-17-2006, 12:45 AM
http://www.thecrimson.com/article.aspx?ref=510859


Study: ‘Other’ Box Misleading

Published On Friday, January 13, 2006 2:47 AM
By ALEXANDRA C. BELL
Crimson Staff Writer


Colleges’ statistics about diversity and racial proportions may be misleading, according to the results of a recent California study by the James Irvine Foundation’s Campus Diversity Initiative.

The exploratory analysis, a collaboration between the Foundation, Claremont Graduate University, and the Association of American Colleges and Universities (AACU), showed a strikingly different demographic picture of three college campuses after comparing the institutions’ enrollment statistics with data gathered from an independent national survey of students once they had matriculated.

The researchers found that the post-matriculation survey had a significantly lower percentage of respondents who declined to answer ethnicity questions.

On one campus, for example, the admissions data for one year showed only 42 percent of entering students as white—with a 32 percent “unknown” category—whereas the post-matriculation survey’s results had only 4 percent “unknown,” revealing that at least 57 percent of the student population was white, and potentially up to 70 percent.

Dr. Alma Clayton-Pedersen, vice president for education and institutional renewal at the AACU and co-principal investigator of the evaluation project, explained why the findings were important for the welfare of students entering college.

“Students will choose to go to a college based on their perception of the environment there,” she said. “It is not the only reason...but it is one and it is a particularly important one for students of color, especially in a predominantly white institution.”

Nancy O’Neill, director of programs for the office of education and institutional renewal at the AACU, added, “There are also white students who are looking for an ethnically or racially diverse environment.”

Clayton-Pedersen stressed that the project did not attempt to explore the motivations of the students who left their ethnicity unknown, although it does suggest some speculative reasons for students’ candor once they enrolled, including a fear of discrimination. The study also suggests that mixed-race students may not feel comfortable ticking only one box.

O’Neill suggested that student suspicions that their ethnicity would be held against them were in part due to a lack of clarity about why colleges wanted this information.

“We don’t communicate well to students at the institutional level why we’re interested in this information in the aggregate,” she said.

According to data from the Harvard Registrar’s Office, 9 percent of the roughly 6,500 students enrolled in fall 2004 categorized themselves as “unknown/other”, which, although less than the campuses used in the study, is substantially higher than the 5.9 percent national average.

Marlyn McGrath Lewis, director of admissions for Harvard College, wrote in an e-mail that at Harvard students who did not specify an ethnicity were not necessarily from one racial group, but included “those who just don’t like the terminology of the federal categories, those who find all categories alien/insufficient, and even folks who want more specificity in their identification group.”

Many students agreed that forms do not always include sufficient or accurate options.

“I ticked “other” on a bunch of those forms, because I’m of mixed race descent,” Allen A.T. Ewalt ’07 said. “Notably, though, not the common app. That one allowed you to tick multiple boxes.”

Seantanu C. Dongre ’06, who is half white and half Indian, agreed. “I identify with both cultures equally,” he said. “Some forms ask you to check all that apply, but don’t even include anything more specific than ‘Asian,’ so I end up checking ‘other’ anyway.”

However, other students said that they had more ideological reasons for their reluctance to commit to any one particular ethnic background.

Vivek A. Rudrapatna ’06 said that the belief that race is used as an admissions factor influenced his decision not to provide ethnic information on the medical school applications that he has been submitting this year.

“I’m of Indian ethnicity and we’re over-represented in the medical profession,” he said. “I wanted them to judge me on meritocratic grounds alone.”

On the other end of the scale, Charles J. Swanson ’08, who is “equal parts” white and African American, said he did not want to be the victim of positive discrimination.

“I didn’t want to get in just because I’m African American,” he said, “so I thought checking ‘other’ might be more appropriate in that respect as well.”

Clayton-Pedersen and O’Neill said that there were no plans for any follow-up research to the project, but rather expressed a hope that it would spur researchers and institutions all over the country to re-evaluate their data.

“It could be a catalyst for other institutions—like Harvard—to ask themselves these questions and try to find out the answers,” O’Neill said.

“If you have a skewed notion of who your students are you have false assumptions of what they’re putting into and getting from the environment,” Clayton-Pedersen said.

Kodos
01-17-2006, 01:26 AM
here are also white students who are looking for an ethnically or racially diverse environment

Azn chicks?

RikuDrak
01-17-2006, 01:44 AM
Aha! So perhaps Affirmative Action should just be removed from schools eh? Let the most intelligent man win. If it happens to be mostly white males then it just happens to be white males.

Lets stop being stupid and start thinking about efficiency. I'd be happier to have someone take my place in college because they are more intelligent than I, not because they're black and the school needs to be politically correct.

Starr
01-17-2006, 02:54 AM
You just know someone is going to start bitching about this and say these white students are bigots for assuming that minorities are at an advantage because they are non-white. Anyone knows how it works, but some still want to believe that only highly qualified minorities are given a chance over whites. Charles Rigaud has said it about a million times.:rolleyes:

One of the most retarded things I have heard in relation to this was a woman(white, of course) who decided and was trying to get others of all races to check "other" and write in "human race" LOL.

infoterror
01-17-2006, 04:26 AM
"Being white is not widely perceived to be an advantage, so why make it easy to be identified as ¡¥just another white kid,'ƒ|" one writer said.

Translation: it's a disadvantage. White = generic, in the eyes of our media.

Lord_Lugdreg
01-17-2006, 08:01 AM
When confronted with one of these Affirmative Action Quizzes I mark 'Other' and in the blank next to it write 'European-American'.

Every other race in America gets to be hyphentated... African-Americans, Mexican-Americans etc., except for the Whites. My belief is this is because ZOG wants to start getting into the coloreds minds that Whites aren't Americans. This must be combatted by using the term 'European-American' and also usage of this term also adds to Balkanization since no one is then just 'an American' and I want ZOG to collapse.

Excorcism
01-17-2006, 08:55 AM
When confronted with one of these Affirmative Action Quizzes I mark 'Other' and in the blank next to it write 'European-American'.

Every other race in America gets to be hyphentated... African-Americans, Mexican-Americans etc., except for the Whites. My belief is this is because ZOG wants to start getting into the coloreds minds that Whites aren't Americans. This must be combatted by using the term 'European-American' and also usage of this term also adds to Balkanization since no one is then just 'an American' and I want ZOG to collapse.


You mean how the term "white" is almost looked at like as if it's a common "enemy" by certain minorities? I remember hearing the English originally started the concept to differientiate themselves from the slaves and it worked as a sort of unifier amongst the different work classes in England. Now it seems to be a negative term, or sort of "target" Such examples include "blame whitey" or how "the man" is the white entity.

In the old days, people used to refer to each other mainly on a national basis, rather than somethign founded primarily in eugenics. Still, I think for the most part, blacks from Africa were mainly lumped together. If anyone cares to clarify that, feel free.

Geist
01-17-2006, 11:43 AM
This is a difficult one, one I'll have to face myself. Applying for a PhD in England all the forms have this race category (not in Ireland however) and I'm seriously considering choosing not to disclose my race, is it helpful? One form has Irish which should be OK but others simply have white. I can only imagine that if the choice comes down to another white guy and some carribean rude boy that these 'radical' Theory departments are going with the rude boy :mad:

Jimbo Gomez
01-17-2006, 05:09 PM
Pick a rude wog over an eloquent white? I'm not surprised.