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College Presidents Still Report Positive Race Relations on Campus
Education

College Presidents Still Report Positive Race Relations on Campus

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Chart: data points are described in article

Story Highlights

  • 84% rate their campus race relations positively, unchanged from 2015
  • Sharply fewer rate race relations on U.S. campuses positively
  • College students also say the racial climate on their campus is good

PRINCETON, N.J. -- During a year marked by numerous college protests over race and diversity issues, presidents of U.S. colleges and universities describe race relations on their own campus positively, and no worse than they did in 2015. However, their broader perceptions of race relations on campuses nationwide are significantly worse than a year ago. Currently, just 24% of presidents rate race relations on U.S. campuses as either excellent or good, down sharply from 43% in 2015.

Change in College Presidents' Assessments of Race Relations
Generally speaking, would you say the state of race relations [on your campus/on college and university campuses in this country] is excellent, good, fair or poor?
2015% 2016% Change%
Own Campus
Excellent 18 20 +2
Good 63 64 +1
Fair 18 16 -2
Poor 1 1 0
U.S. College Campuses
Excellent 1 0 -1
Good 42 24 -18
Fair 51 65 +14
Poor 5 10 +5
Inside Higher Ed Survey of College and University Presidents

These results are based on the , conducted by Â鶹´«Ã½AV.

Protests about the treatment of racial and ethnic minority students erupted last fall on a number of college campuses, including the University of Missouri, Yale University, Princeton University and Ithaca College. Student concerns ultimately led to the resignation of the president of the Missouri state university system and the chancellor of the main campus in Columbia. The president of Ithaca College also resigned under student and faculty pressure for his handling of race matters on that campus.

These protests received widespread media attention and likely contribute to presidents' more negative assessment this year -- fewer than one in four presidents now say race relations are "excellent" or "good" on campuses across the country. The majority of presidents, 65%, describe race relations on U.S. campuses as "fair," and 10% say they are "poor." The latter figure is up from 5% a year ago.

But in a year of high-profile student activism on race relations issues on U.S. campuses, college presidents continue to be just as positive about race relations on their own campus as they were in early 2015. The survey finds 84% of presidents saying race relations on their campus are "excellent" or "good," similar to the 81% of presidents who rated their campus race relations positively a year ago. Just 1% of presidents say race relations on their campus are poor, the same as in 2015.

These findings could indicate that a few highly publicized incidents of racial tensions on campuses have had a dramatic influence on the way presidents perceive the state of race relations at most U.S. colleges and that racial strife is not the norm at colleges. College presidents' more positive assessments of race relations on their own campus, compared with campuses nationally, may also reflect individuals' tendency to rate their own situation more positively than the situation in the country as a whole.

College Students Report Positive Racial Climate on Campus

It is not just college presidents who perceive race relations positively on their campus. A new , conducted by Â鶹´«Ã½AV, finds college students are generally positive about the racial climate on their campus. Nearly three-quarters of college students describe interactions between students of different races and their treatment of one another on campus as either excellent (26%) or good (48%). Only 6% say the racial climate on their campus is poor.

Majorities of all major racial and ethnic groups are positive about the racial climate on their campus. At least seven in 10 whites (76%), Hispanics (74%) and Asians (70%) describe the racial climate as either excellent or good. Blacks are slightly less positive, with 62% evaluating their campus' racial climate positively.

Blacks are more than twice as likely as whites to say the racial climate on their campus is poor (13% vs. 5%, respectively).

College Students' Ratings of Racial Climate on Their Campus
Thinking about how students of different races interact and treat one another, how would you rate the overall racial climate on your college's campus -- as excellent, good, only fair or poor?
All% White% Black% Hispanic % Asian%
Excellent 26 27 21 15 27
Good 48 49 41 59 43
Fair 20 20 26 16 25
Poor 6 5 13 10 5
Knight Foundation/Newseum Institute/Â鶹´«Ã½AV Survey of College Students

Students' views of the quality of race relations on campus are related to their perceptions of how racially and ethnically diverse they perceive the student body to be. While 87% of those who believe their campus is "highly diverse" rate the racial climate positively, 34% of those who say their campus is "not diverse at all" do.

College students were not asked to rate the racial climate on colleges nationwide.

Implications

Both presidents and students at U.S. colleges and universities assess the racial climate on their campuses positively. And presidents see the situation as no worse than a year ago, even though a wave of college protests on racial matters is likely contributing to their considerably more negative assessment of race relations on campuses nationwide.

While the poll results paint a generally positive picture of race relations on campus, they do show that there is still progress to be made, given that about one in six presidents and about one in four students rate the racial climate at their college as fair or poor.

Survey Methods

Results for college presidents are based on Web interviews conducted Jan. 7-Feb. 2, 2016, with 727 presidents of U.S. colleges and universities with student enrollment greater than 500 students. The sampling frame for the study was the universe of 3,046 presidents of colleges with greater than 500 students, with weighting adjustments made to correct for nonresponse using institutional characteristics (region of the country, private versus public control, two-year or four-year degree-granting, and student enrollment size. The weighted sample results can be viewed as representative of the views of presidents at colleges nationwide.

Results for college students are based on telephone interviews conducted Feb. 29-March 15, 2016, with a random sample of 3,072 U.S. college students, aged 18 to 24, who are currently enrolled full time at four-year institutions. The college sample consists of a random subset of full-time students at 32 randomly selected U.S. four-year colleges that were stratified based on region, enrollment size and private versus public control. For results based on the total sample of college students, the margin of sampling error is ±3 percentage points at the 95% confidence level. All reported margins of sampling error include computed design effects for weighting.


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