Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
The purpose of this blog is to provide minority college students at Syracuse University with a place where they can connect with other minority students in order to share their experiences, feelings, struggles and successes throughout their undergraduate and graduate years. This blog is a positive environment that encourages all to participate.
1. Do you feel as though your college experience as a minority student is different from the college experience of a white student? If so in what ways?
Yes socially and academically. Socially it is very different because of the financial status of minority students compared to white students. White students prefer to go out to the bars and minority students prefer to attend house parties where there is no money being spent. Academically there seems to be a more relaxed nature in the way that white students approach their school work compared to minority students. Minority students feel as though they must work harder in order to compete in a white world.
2. How has your perception of being a minority on this campus changed since freshman year, if it has even changed?
My perception of being a minority student has changed because in my opinion back then the segregation between white and minority and within minority population was not as extreme as it is now. It is still fascinating to me that this is still happening. It is segregated residentially and socially. I do not know the specific numbers but I know that a lot of students on south campus are African American and also it is mostly evident in social gatherings. It is kind of interesting that there has been a shift from getting to know campus community and learning about other cultures to only embracing own culture and not making effort to learn about other cultures.
3. Being a minority student on this campus what struggles do you face that you feel white students do not face?
I feel as though there is more pressure on me to succeed academically. That there is a need to keep up with the white students and if I do not keep up academically with the white students then I fall into stereotype. The pressure mostly comes from my parents and also sometimes from minority professors.
4. Do you feel that you can relate to other minority students on this campus?
I feel as though I can relate to any student on this campus regardless of race/ethnic background or sexual orientation. I do not see myself as a minority student; I see myself as a student.
5. Does Syracuse University provide adequate resources for minority students on campus? Have you used any of these resources?
Yes I feel that Syracuse University does provide adequate resources for minority students however I feel as though they fail at promoting these services to students. I have used counseling services and I found them to be very useful.
6. What changes would you make to Syracuse University in order to improve the college experience of future minority students?
I would try to promote more integration between the races on campus in every aspect: socially, academically etc.
5 comments:
Looks like an interesting space. Will you tell us your own story?
JJ
very interesting topics. On this campus they make it very well known that you are a minority. They make you choose to either identify with what they label you as or identify with the "other".
I really liked the honesty with which people answered the questions. Being a fellow minority at Syracuse University I can resonate with the stories that have been told. I believe that these stories are the same for other minorities at college campuses that are mostly White across the nation. These four students' stories are excellent examples of how minorities feel at college campuses.
I thought it was very interesting what people had to say. Overall, i think this campus does a great job for integrating minorities. Plus, we have a fairly high minority population. As an African American i can honestly say that some people get very picky and complain there isn't enough AA or Hispanic populations on campus. But i don't think that is SU's fault. There are millions of other reasons why the minority presence on campus does not match those of the whites and that extends all the way back to the education systems and environments that we grow up in. I think people should be happy with the numbers we have on this campus considering we are ranked in the top 50th. Unless you are looking at an HBC, you wont see these kind of numbers anywhere else from a private university.
Blair: Psychology major
Compared to other private institutions, SU is fairly diverse and has welcomed people of many ethnically and economically diverse backgrounds. Although institutional racism continues to exist, I feel that as the years progress, race will be less of an issue and our financial backgrounds will become a major part of our perceived identity.
I feel that students of color underestimate the opportunities that SU has to offer and complain too much on how they have it harder than a white person on campus. Yes, white people on campus might have more networking opportunities because they outnumber people of color but this gives us more of a reason to put twice as much of the work in and prove to them that we have earned our way to this institution.
-Carolyn Biology major
Post a Comment