Speakers Hail Campus Diversity
Benefits
By NICOLE L. GILL
Capital News Service
November 19, 1997COLLEGE
PARK, MD - The advisory board for
President Clinton's Initiative on Race
came to the University of Maryland on
Wednesday to find ways to preserve campus
diversity in the face of recent attacks
on affirmative action.
While board members cautiously avoided
criticizing initiatives like California's
Proposition 209, which prohibits
preferences in hiring, contracting and
admissions, they said there is still a
need for campus diversity programs.
"We're looking for promising
practices," said board chairman John
Hope Franklin. "This is about how to
do what Proposition 209 fails to
do."
The daylong forum was focused on
successful diversity programs from
colleges around the country. Speakers at
the conference were all for such
programs, and the richness they bring to
a college education.
"What good does it do me if
everyone is the same?" asked
Jennifer Walper, a Jewish senior at the
College Park campus who said she wanted
to attend a school that resembled,
demographically, the larger society.
Since coming to college, she said, she
has realized that diversity is more than
just being around other people, it also
means knowing about them, their histories
and their concerns.
"An issue that affects one group
will have an effect on the Jewish
community and society as a whole,"
she said.
But Jesus Trevino, director of the
Intergroup Relations Center at
Arizona State University, said such
interaction does not come easily. That's
where diversity programs come into play.
"Interaction with individuals who
are different is fraught with
anxiety, misunderstandings, conflict and
tension," Trevino said. "I find
troubling the lack of opportunities or
the lack of programs on most college
campuses for structured and deliberate
intergroup contact.
"Diversity is an asset and
colleges and universities can utilize it
as such by structuring positive contact
between many different groups," he
said.
The University of Maryland began
moving in that direction a decade ago
with its "Moving Toward
Community" initiative, which
coordinates
diversity activities in single united
effort.
The university now boasts 153 black
faculty members, said Gladys Brown,
director of human relations, and ranks
second overall in the number of
African-American students graduating with
a degree in the sciences.
Minority students are not the only
ones to benefit from diversity
initiatives, said Daryl G. Smith,
professor of education and psychology at
Claremont Graduate University in
California.
"Diversity initiatives positively
influence both majority and
minority students on campus," she
said.
Historically black colleges and
universities also provide good
examples of working diversity initiatives
in higher education. The faculty and
student population at these institutions
are often more diverse than
at predominantly white schools.
Norman Francis, president of noted
that 45 percent of the faculty at
many historically black institutions are
not African American, whereas
only 3.8 percent of faculty at
predominantly white colleges are black.
He added that white student enrollment at
schools like Xavier was 13 percent, while
black students made up only 8 percent of
the student body at non-black schools.
Claremont's Smith said that only by
encouraging diversity will the
full potential of higher education be
reached.
"Campuses serve as a microcosm
for the issues, efforts, structural
inequities and tensions in society,"
she said.
The forum was part of the advisory
board's year-long examination of race
relations in the United States. The board
is scheduled to report its
findings to the president next summer.

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