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Campus diversity is becoming difficult to measure as students hide race and ethnicity on college applications

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When the Supreme Court at American colleges and universities just over a year ago, many . But in part due to students who decide not to disclose their race or ethnicity, coupled with universities' selective use of statistics, it is not clear how much the decision has affected diversity on campus.

As higher education institutions begin reporting the racial makeup of the class of 2028—the first to be affected by the 2023 decision—the data is hard to interpret, and .

As a sociologist who has studied how institutions of higher education , I have identified some factors that contribute to this lack of clarity.

Students don't identify with choices given

Some students may not select a racial or ethnic category because they don't believe any of the categories really fit. For example, before multiracial students could select "one or more," , they were more likely to decline to identify their race or ethnicity. Some even entirely.

Other students don't view their race as important: "race and ethnicity unknown" are white. Of these students, 33% say race and ethnicity are not a relevant part of their identity, a researcher found in 2008.

The number of students who don't respond to questions about race or ethnicity—and are listed in the "race unknown" category—is increasing. At Harvard University, for example, the percentage of "race-unknown" undergrad students .

As the number of "race unknown" students grows, it not only becomes harder to determine a student body's ethnic and but also the impact of the ban on race-conscious admissions.

Fearing discrimination, students don't disclose race

Some students believe their race or ethnicity will harm their chances of admission.

This is particularly true at many selective institutions, which than less selective institutions, about 4% compared with 1% to 2%.

My research shows that students are even at selective law schools, where race and ethnicity could be used among a variety of criteria for admissions before the Supreme Court ruled against that practice. An average of 8% of students at those schools chose not to identify, compared with 4% at less selective law schools.

'We're very diverse': University decisions distort statistics

What a university chooses to report will also affect the student body the public sees. Harvard, for example, .

to . These strategies include counting multiracial students multiple times—once for each race selected—or including as a separate category in demographic pie charts. The greater the number of different-colored slices on the chart, the more demographically "diverse" an institution appears to be.

Impact of Supreme Court ruling: Clearer picture coming soon

While universities may not all report their student demographics the same way in their own materials, they all have to report it the same way to the federal government—namely, to its , better known as IPEDS. The next IPEDS report on characteristics for the 2024 enrollment class is expected to be released in . Once that data is available, a better picture of how the Supreme Court's decision has affected diversity in should emerge.

That clearer picture might not last long. In 2027, the will require colleges and universities to make changes to how they report student race and ethnicity. Among the changes is the addition of a Middle Eastern and North African category. Under the current standard, . As a result, white enrollment at some colleges and universities will appear to decline after 2027.

The new standards will also change the way universities treat Hispanic or Latino on enrollment forms. Today, if students self-identify as Hispanic and white, they will be categorized as Hispanic. If students select Hispanic and white in 2027, they will be categorized as multiracial. The revised categories will muddy the impact of the Supreme Court's decision. A drop in the number of Hispanic students reported could be due to the court's ruling. Or it may result from the new way students will be counted.

Until universities and colleges adjust to the new guidelines about collecting and reporting race—and as long as students decline to provide their racial identities—the full effect of banning consideration of in college admissions will remain a cloudy picture at best.

Provided by The Conversation

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Citation: Campus diversity is becoming difficult to measure as students hide race and ethnicity on college applications (2024, November 18) retrieved 24 June 2025 from /news/2024-11-campus-diversity-difficult-students-ethnicity.html
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