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State Stix
Minorities on campus:
slow progress in Illinois Walk the halls of a public high school in Illinois and, on average, you will find that nearly one in four of the students is African-American. By graduation day, only about one in six of students getting diplomas is black. Visit the classrooms of the typical public or private university in Illinois and you'll find, on average, about one in eight of the students is black. But if you attend graduation ceremonies, you'll see that only one of every 14 students getting a bachelor's degree is black. The trend is similar for Hispanic students (see figure 1). Colleges and universities have taken strides to increase minority enrollments, but progress has been slow. According to the Illinois Board of Higher Education, "the percentage of minority students attending colleges and universities is below the percentage of these groups in the state's population ..." — 15 percent for blacks, 8 percent for Hispanics. In its annual Report to the Governor and General Assembly on Underrepresented Groups in Public Institutions of Higher Education in Illinois, issued in January, the board found:
Donald Sevener
34/April 1993/Illinois Issues |
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