On college campuses, planning for a post-Millennial future
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| Baltimore
School pride is strong on the suburban campus of the University of Maryland, Baltimore County 鈥 and not just because of a history-making last year.
UMBC, and its president, Freeman Hrabowski, have for their commitment to racial diversity and the high number of masters and doctoral graduates of color here. The school produces more black graduates聽with than anywhere else in the country.
UMBC is one of a few campuses that have prioritized student diversity as a core value, says Adrianna Kezar, professor of higher education at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles. And that distinction may carry more weight as racial diversity rises in the United States.
Why We Wrote This
Demographic shifts in the United States mean that students live and learn differently than they did 50 years ago. One college offers a model for keeping up with the changing needs of a new generation.
from Pew Research Center shows that the 鈥減ost-Millennial鈥 generation, currently between the ages of 6 and 22, is the most racially diverse ever. Its oldest members are also enrolling in college at the highest rates in history. The shift spotlights the changing values of a college degree across diverse communities in the US 鈥 and raises pressing questions for how colleges can accommodate their transforming student bodies.
鈥淓verything that we do at the center of the institution needs to be rethought,鈥 says Professor Kezar. 鈥淚f the new demographics of the students are wholly different and the majority of our students are not like those we've had in the past, how do we relook at the primary functions that we have so that they have support?鈥
This new cohort of students looks a lot less white because of rising enrollment rates especially among Black and Latino communities, says Richard Fry, a senior researcher at Pew Research Center. One key contributor: A bigger proportion of Latino students were born in the US, a fact that correlates with higher academic performances in grade school.
Building support
Sylvia Anokam is a fourth-year student at UMBC. Her parents immigrated from Nigeria and both are college educated. They expect the same for her. That trend is growing among her peers 鈥 post-Millennials are more likely to live with a college-educated parent than older generations, according to the research from Pew.聽Ms. Anokam doesn鈥檛 identify strongly with any generational group, but she feels optimistic about rising diversity and college enrollment for people her age.聽聽
鈥淭he more students of diverse backgrounds are entering the school the more work [to make college accessible] is just going to be coming through because ... now there鈥檚 more people that we need to advocate for, there鈥檚 more people who we need to look out for,鈥 she says.
UMBC鈥檚 minority enrollment is 48.6 percent, which matches the proportion of nonwhite post-Millennials overall, according to Pew.聽For Millennials in 2002, the nonwhite figure was about 39 percent, and for members of Generation X in 1986, it was about 30 percent. The upward trend is similar for college enrollment: About 59 percent of 18- to 20-year-olds who are out of high school are now in college, compared with 53 percent in 2002 and 44 percent in 1986.
Jason Ashe, a black PhD student in psychology, says the diversity at UMBC today has helped him feel 鈥渋ntellectually safe.鈥 The university has a long list of initiatives aimed at empowering students from underrepresented backgrounds, including the federally funded Upward Bound and McNair Scholars programs, which deliver targeted resources for first generation and low-income students pursuing bachelors and doctoral degrees, respectively.
For Blake Hipsley, a senior and McNair Scholar who is white, the program covered half the cost of his GRE test fees. That made a huge difference, the first-generation student says, because, 鈥淚 don't have my mom tapping my shoulder, paying it for me. I have to pay out of pocket on my own.鈥
About 25 percent of the university鈥檚 enrollment is first generation, says Corris Davis, director of the Upward Bound and McNair Scholars programs.
UMBC also hosts several university-specific efforts to promote diversity, including a soon-to-be-launched program called Transfer Engagement and Achievement Mentoring, or TEAM. The initiative came out of a conversation between a faculty member and Lisa Gray, the school's associate director of diversity and inclusion, after they noticed troublingly low retention rates for black male transfer students.
鈥淚t is not okay for us to let any group of students struggle here. We know that if they could get in here they deserve to be here. So it鈥檚 on us to make sure we can support them,鈥 Ms. Gray聽says.
Making diversity the 鈥榤ain dish鈥
Greater integration of faculty, students, and staff is important to the future of college success, says Kezar.聽UMBC was founded in 1966 鈥 at the height of the civil rights movement 鈥 and President Hrabowski's leadership has continued to fuel . As student demographics change, Kezar says colleges will have to make a concerted effort to track how underrepresented students fare 鈥 and what interventions can support them.
鈥淒iversity has been treated like a side dish for kind of its entire history in higher education,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t goes back to your primary function of the leadership team of any effort.鈥
The same might be true for the workforce once post-Millennials begin to graduate. Plenty of companies want a diverse roster of employees, says Kezar, but so far few seem keen on taking the steps to achieve it.
Racial representation also doesn鈥檛 necessarily translate to inclusion. Mr. Ashe, the psychology student, points out that even though he sees substantial diversity at UMBC, he is still on track to be only the third African-American man to graduate with a PhD from his department.
Ashe and Gray both note that more work is needed to propel underrepresented students forward. But while no institution is perfect, they say the efforts by their school could serve as a model for colleges across the US.
鈥淚 like to say we have a very beautiful international airport experience for students at UMBC where everybody's coming at you from all different destinations,鈥 Gray says. 鈥淏ut our work now is to create space for them to have some layover time.鈥
Clarification: This story has been updated to reflect that Jason Ashe's comments about graduates refer to the number of PhD students in his department, and to add Blake Hipsley's race.聽