Diverse College Search-O-Meter

<p>Hi
I'm looking for diverse colleges.
Any way to specify certain race quotas on the college search engines?</p>

<p>Quotas are illegal, friend, but it's easy to tell who uses AA and who doesn't, although on collegeboard you can search for a certain % minority. Some of the more diverse top colleges and universities (I didn't include the UCs):</p>

<p>Amherst College
Columbia University
Haverford College
MIT
Pitzer College
Pomona College
Princeton
Rice
Swarthmore
U Florida
UMD
U Miami
Yale
Harvard</p>

<p>you mean diverse student body?if so most school in or near large city would be a good fit;UCLA,UCSD,UT austin,Umiami,Uw-seattle,Umich,Depaul university,NYU,BU...</p>

<p>^^ Or just large universities in general</p>

<p>i wouldn't call Ponoma(countries represented 27) , rice(countries represented 25),Pitzer College(countries represented 14) diverse...</p>

<p>Diversity does not solely refer to international representation, brother.</p>

<p>Pomona:
1% Native American
14% Asian
9% Black
10% Hispanic
48% White
3% Non-Resident Alien
14% Unknown</p>

<p>Rice:
1% Native American
18% Asian
7% Black
14% Hispanic
53% White
3% Non-Resident Alien
5% Unknown</p>

<p>Pitzer:
<1% Native American
10% Asian
8% Black
11% Hispanic
48% White
3% Non-Resident Alien
19% Unknown</p>

<p>They all sound pretty diverse to me...</p>

<p>Hey BRO.!!!no they are not considerated diverse as far as i'm concerned.i'm looking at my college bible(4 year colleges colleges 2006 [thomson, peterson's])</p>

<p>I suggest visiting if you have a couple of colleges in mind. Duke is at least as diverse (if not more) by numbers as the colleges above, but it lacks the race interaction that one might find at a place like Swarthmore, for example.</p>

<p>Thanks for the collegeboard.com link.
For some reason though, GSU doesn't fit into my reqs of 4 year, public, housing, 25%+ minorities.. Was hoping to find similar schools.</p>

<p>Try the CUNY schools: City College, Brooklyn, Queens, Hunter, Lehman, Baruch. I believe only Hunter offers housing though.</p>

<p>


You say pate-TA, he says pota-TO. ;) </p>

<p>Diversity can mean many different things to different people. I tend to think in terms of racial and ethnic diversity along with geographic diversity by state and country.</p>

<p>U of Texas-Arlington
U of Alabama at Birmingham
Northwestern University
Rutgers University-New Brunswick</p>

<p>


Easy, easy. Well, not by individual race classifications but this should work just as well. Just go to collegeboard.com and you can search as much as you want with these search parameters <a href="http://apps.collegeboard.com/search/servlet/advsearchservlet?buttonPressed=next&navigateTo=3%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://apps.collegeboard.com/search/servlet/advsearchservlet?buttonPressed=next&navigateTo=3&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>Diversity<br>
Consider the geographic, ethnic, racial, and religious diversity of the students as a way to learn more about the world. Search information about first-year students. </p>

<p>Percent of students with minority backgrounds:
Less than 25%
25%-50%
50%-75%
75%-100%
No preference </p>

<p>Percent of international students:
Less than 25%
25%-50%
50%-75%
75%-100%
No preference</p>

<p>Percent of out-of-state students:
Less than 25%
25%-50%
50%-75%
75%-100%
No preference </p>

<p>Enjoy.</p>

<p>How aren't the colleges I posted diverse. They all have relatively high proportions of Hispanics, African Americans, Native Americans, and Asians.</p>

<p>If you don't consider Pomona having 27 countries represented in a school of less than 1,600 students diverse, then what would you consider diverse?</p>

<p>Pateta is living in a fantasy world, I suppose :).</p>

<p>Diverse to me is.. less than 60% White :D</p>

<p>To me this is like looking for trees in a forest; colleges and universities are almost always more diverse--in most respects (not including ideas and philosophies)--than any other institution, neighborhood or district in American.</p>

<p>plus, theres no way of telling how diverse your fellow classmates may be when you get there.</p>