<p>is there a lot of diversity race wise?
i see that theres about 6% asians
but are there many koreans there?>
or in new orleans in general</p>
<p>OP - I suppose CC posters could chase down a number for you. But honestly, Tulane is the most geographically diverse university in the United States. It’s a major attraction of the university, and students know their classmates will be a diverse group. </p>
<p>That said, if you require an environment with a significant number of Koreans, you may have to look elsewhere. UT-Austin perhaps?</p>
<p>[Xap</a> Student Center :: campus tours :: University of Texas - Austin campus movies](<a href=“XAP - Page Not Found”>XAP - Page Not Found)</p>
<p>NewHope is correct that there is a lot of geographic diversity. As far as race diversity, it is not as much as some others I have seen (this question came up a while back and so it was researched) but the statistics also seem to vary from one reporting site to another. If you believe this one:</p>
<p>[College</a> Navigator - National Center for Education Statistics](<a href=“http://nces.ed.gov/collegenavigator/]College”>College Navigator - National Center for Education Statistics)</p>
<p>After finding the school of interest, click on “Enrollment” and look at the bar charts. So for example:</p>
<p><a href=“College Navigator - Search Results”>College Navigator - Tulane University of Louisiana;
<p>then you will see Tulane is not quite as diverse as many peer institutions such as Vandy, Emory, Miami, BC, etc. When I say peer, I am talking about schools that have a lot of overlap as far as people applying (don’t want to get into another one of those arguments about which school is “better” and rankings). It is actually kind of fascinating. Tulane is very similar to BC and Vandy, the big difference with Duke and Emory are that Asian students replace about 15% of the white students compared to Tulane, and at Miami Hispanic students replace about 20% of the white students. At UT-Austin there are about 10% more Hispanics and 10% more Asians, and fewer blacks (all percentages, of course). Not sure what all that means, but something to chew on anyway.</p>
<p>Tulane’s a bit odd because the majority of its students are white, whereas the majority of people in New Orleans are black. New Orleans in general does have a lot of race/background/etc. diversity, but I’m not sure about Koreans specifically.</p>
<p>anonymityy - true, although a lot of cities, if you are strictly talking about the city limits, are now majority black or majority non-caucasian. But no doubt it is a starker contrast in New Orleans than many other cities. I have never heard that there is a significant Korean community in New Orleans.</p>