Campus Ethnic Diversity National Universities
Campus Ethnic Diversity Methodology
College-bound students who believe that studying with people of different racial and ethnic backgrounds is important will want to consider student-body diversity when choosing a school. To identify colleges where students are most likely to encounter undergraduates from racial or ethnic groups different from their own, U.S. News factors in the total proportion of minority students, leaving out international students, and the overall mix of groups. The data are drawn from each institution's 2011-2012 school year student body.
The categories we use in our calculations are Black or African-American, Hispanic, American Indian, Asian, Pacific Islander, White (non-Hispanic), and multiracial. Students who did not identify themselves as members of any of those demographic groups were classified as whites who are non-Hispanic for the purpose of these calculations. Our formula produces a diversity index that ranges from 0.0 to 1.0. The closer a school's number is to 1.0, the more diverse is the student population.
| Save | School | Diversity index |
|---|---|---|
|
Georgia Southern University
Statesboro, GA |
0.47 | |
|
Hofstra University
Hempstead, NY |
0.47 | |
|
University of Alaska–Fairbanks
Fairbanks, AK |
0.47 | |
|
University of Nevada–Reno
Reno, NV |
0.47 | |
|
Barry University
Miami Shores, FL |
0.46 | |
|
Case Western Reserve University
Cleveland, OH |
0.46 | |
|
George Washington University
Washington, DC |
0.46 | |
|
Texas A&M University–Kingsville
Kingsville, TX |
0.46 | |
|
Texas Tech University
Lubbock, TX |
0.46 | |
|
University of South Alabama
Mobile, AL |
0.46 |
