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Increasing faculty diversity : the occupational choices of high-achieving minority students

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In recent years, colleges have successfully increased the radical diversity of their student bodies.

They have been less successful, however, in diversifying their faculties.

This book identifies the ways in which minority students make occupational choices, what their attitudes are toward a career in academia, and why so few become college professors.

Working with a large sample of high-achieving minority students from a variety of institutions, the authors conclude that minority students are no less likely than white students to aspire to academic careers.

But because minorities are less likely to go to college and less likely to earn high grades within college, few end up going to graduate school.

The shortage of minority academics is not a result of the failure of educational institutions to hire them; but of the very small pool of minority PhD candidates.

In examining why some minorities decide to become academics, the authors conclude that same-race role models are no more effective than white role models and that affirmative action contributes to the problem by steering minority students to schools where they perform relatively poorly. They end with policy recommendations on how more minority students might be attracted to an academic career.

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Product Details
Harvard University Press
0674009452 / 9780674009455
Hardback
28/02/2003
United States
English
416 p. : ill.
24 cm
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