Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where did the term BIPOC originate? It is dehumanizing and seems to no only serve people who can’t be bothered to see a non-white person as a person.
I hate the terms BIPOC and POC. Should we use “people of no color” (PONC) to describe White people?
This is like asking why there’s no Anglo-American History month. Bit&$, do you not understand that every month is Anglo-American History month. For all the whining about liberal snowflakes and wokeness, no group gets more butthurt about the prospect of ceding power and being the center of the culture than white people.
Over 70% of americans are white. Why is it so surprising that society reflects this?
For people of college age, 18-24, about 50% of America is white. So 70% would not be reflective of America as a whole. Which is the point.
The point of what? Are 50% of your friends white?
Actually now you mention it, probably 50% of my friends are white. But that is sort of irrelevant.
Point is that if you go to a school that is 70% white, that is a skewed sample. Just like if you go to a HBCU, that population would be skewed too. May be ok for you but may not be something someone else wants in their college experience. Why is that a problem for you?
How is it irrelevant? If your friends don’t match the changing demographics should you dumpm and recruit new ones? Do they span all age groups and religions as well? Why is this only important for college? What about your work place 50% white? Is it evenly split men vs women? What is the point of all this bean counting?
My work place was less than 50% white and less than 50% male.
Everyone still uses it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So what are we to infer from this thread? Many whites do not value diversity? You just tolerate non-white people? And that you'd be equally as happy to be at an all white institution. I find this utterly depressing.
Also you keep asking if we are in more "woke" times, but for many of us, this is our current reality. I don't want to send my kid to a school that only has 3% of other kids that look like him. That sounds horrible.
It means that people value other things more than just what their classmates look like. We all have our own priorities.
But that is not it. Lots of people on this thread saying people who value being in a diverse environment are “woke” or crazy. It’s not just that some people don’t care, they actively denigrate those who may consider diversity at all.
No, I am denigrating people who can’t write a post about diversity without being righteous. Just because one values diversity one is not better than wide swaths of the country that are less diverse.
Anonymous wrote:America is about the only place in the world where diversity in college is a consideration. The overwhelming majority of the top academic institutions in other countries are racially homogenous and yet they are still able to learn despite the lack of classmates with different colored skin. it's astounding.
Anonymous wrote:Wow. Pretty illuminating thread. With some of these responses, why would a student of color consider the diversity makeup of a school when choosing where to apply?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My white kids have attended/attend a DCPS high school and they are very aware when we visit a college that is overwhelmingly white. They understand that no college is going to be as diverse as DCPS but it matters to them to be around people of different backgrounds, experiences, etc. They don't want to just hang out with white kids who have gone to majority white suburban schools in the midwest who have never met anyone of another color.
Considering the number of DCPS kids who go to Wisconsin each year, this view is definitely not universal.
Anonymous wrote:Do people still use this term?
Anonymous wrote:My white kids have attended/attend a DCPS high school and they are very aware when we visit a college that is overwhelmingly white. They understand that no college is going to be as diverse as DCPS but it matters to them to be around people of different backgrounds, experiences, etc. They don't want to just hang out with white kids who have gone to majority white suburban schools in the midwest who have never met anyone of another color.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So what are we to infer from this thread? Many whites do not value diversity? You just tolerate non-white people? And that you'd be equally as happy to be at an all white institution. I find this utterly depressing.
Also you keep asking if we are in more "woke" times, but for many of us, this is our current reality. I don't want to send my kid to a school that only has 3% of other kids that look like him. That sounds horrible.
It means that people value other things more than just what their classmates look like. We all have our own priorities.
But that is not it. Lots of people on this thread saying people who value being in a diverse environment are “woke” or crazy. It’s not just that some people don’t care, they actively denigrate those who may consider diversity at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where did the term BIPOC originate? It is dehumanizing and seems to no only serve people who can’t be bothered to see a non-white person as a person.
I hate the terms BIPOC and POC. Should we use “people of no color” (PONC) to describe White people?
This is like asking why there’s no Anglo-American History month. Bit&$, do you not understand that every month is Anglo-American History month. For all the whining about liberal snowflakes and wokeness, no group gets more butthurt about the prospect of ceding power and being the center of the culture than white people.
Over 70% of americans are white. Why is it so surprising that society reflects this?
For people of college age, 18-24, about 50% of America is white. So 70% would not be reflective of America as a whole. Which is the point.
The point of what? Are 50% of your friends white?
Actually now you mention it, probably 50% of my friends are white. But that is sort of irrelevant.
Point is that if you go to a school that is 70% white, that is a skewed sample. Just like if you go to a HBCU, that population would be skewed too. May be ok for you but may not be something someone else wants in their college experience. Why is that a problem for you?
How is it irrelevant? If your friends don’t match the changing demographics should you dumpm and recruit new ones? Do they span all age groups and religions as well? Why is this only important for college? What about your work place 50% white? Is it evenly split men vs women? What is the point of all this bean counting?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So what are we to infer from this thread? Many whites do not value diversity? You just tolerate non-white people? And that you'd be equally as happy to be at an all white institution. I find this utterly depressing.
Also you keep asking if we are in more "woke" times, but for many of us, this is our current reality. I don't want to send my kid to a school that only has 3% of other kids that look like him. That sounds horrible.
It means that people value other things more than just what their classmates look like. We all have our own priorities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So what are we to infer from this thread? Many whites do not value diversity? You just tolerate non-white people? And that you'd be equally as happy to be at an all white institution. I find this utterly depressing.
Also you keep asking if we are in more "woke" times, but for many of us, this is our current reality. I don't want to send my kid to a school that only has 3% of other kids that look like him. That sounds horrible.
It means that people value other things more than just what their classmates look like. We all have our own priorities.
Anonymous wrote:So what are we to infer from this thread? Many whites do not value diversity? You just tolerate non-white people? And that you'd be equally as happy to be at an all white institution. I find this utterly depressing.
Also you keep asking if we are in more "woke" times, but for many of us, this is our current reality. I don't want to send my kid to a school that only has 3% of other kids that look like him. That sounds horrible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are some safeties that my son likes, but he's a little worried about diversity, like Ohio U and University of New Hampshire. Both have less that 5% each Black, Asian and Hispanic, more than 80% white. We are in an area with a lot more Asian and Hispanic kids, so he doesn’t know what that would feel like.
The population of the State of New Hampshire is 89% white. Hispanic, black and Asian are less than 5% each.
UNH is a state school. The demographics of the student body make complete sense.
No one said the demographics don't make sense for the location. My son likes the schools' academics, sports and campus environments, but he is not sure if they will be a fit--strictly for this diversity reason. We aren't from NH or Ohio and he doesn't know if he will feel comfortable. I thought that was the original question of the thread? Does diversity impact your decision-making.