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One University's Case for Race. Mark Clayton.

by Clayton, Mark; ProQuest Information and Learning Company.
Series: SIRS Enduring Issues 2004Article 11Institutions. Publisher: Christian Science Monitor, 2003ISSN: 1522-3256;.Subject(s): Affirmative action programs | Chronology -- Historical | Discrimination in higher education | Education -- Demographic aspects | Multicultural education | Pluralism (Social sciences) | Reverse discrimination | Universities and colleges -- Admission | University of Michigan | University of VirginiaDDC classification: 050 Summary: "For 145 of its 177 years, the University of Virginia was a nearly all-white, all-male preserve, a Southern finishing school where a gentleman's 'C' was perfectly acceptable. It was also a place where, in February 1861, as the nation girded for civil war, students crept atop the school's famous Rotunda and hoisted a Confederate flag. And that's about where the affirmative-action era found Thomas Jefferson's university in 1969, still dragging its heels on civil rights, saddled with a history of segregation and unremarkable academic achievement. Fast-forward three decades to a new University of Virginia, dubbed the nation's top public university in 2000 and--amazingly enough--a leader in terms of racial diversity." (CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR) This article examines how the claim by most selective universities in the US that "a richer ethnic mix on campus means a better education" plays out at the University of Virginia.
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REF SIRS 2004 Institutions Article 1 The Future of School Choice. REF SIRS 2004 Institutions Article 1 School Choice Works. REF SIRS 2004 Institutions Article 10 Overburdened, Overwhelmed. REF SIRS 2004 Institutions Article 11 One University's Case for Race. REF SIRS 2004 Institutions Article 11 Supreme Court Backs Affirmative Action. REF SIRS 2004 Institutions Article 11 Fixing the Race Gap in 25 Years or Less. REF SIRS 2004 Institutions Article 12 Breaking Out of Our Boxes.

Articles Contained in SIRS Enduring Issues 2004.

Originally Published: One University's Case for Race, April 1, 2003; pp. 15+.

"For 145 of its 177 years, the University of Virginia was a nearly all-white, all-male preserve, a Southern finishing school where a gentleman's 'C' was perfectly acceptable. It was also a place where, in February 1861, as the nation girded for civil war, students crept atop the school's famous Rotunda and hoisted a Confederate flag. And that's about where the affirmative-action era found Thomas Jefferson's university in 1969, still dragging its heels on civil rights, saddled with a history of segregation and unremarkable academic achievement. Fast-forward three decades to a new University of Virginia, dubbed the nation's top public university in 2000 and--amazingly enough--a leader in terms of racial diversity." (CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR) This article examines how the claim by most selective universities in the US that "a richer ethnic mix on campus means a better education" plays out at the University of Virginia.

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