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Alumni Rate Colleges' Responsiveness to Discrimination
Education

Alumni Rate Colleges' Responsiveness to Discrimination

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WASHINGTON, D.C. -- About a quarter of recent college graduates (27%) strongly agree that if they had raised an issue about discrimination on campus, their alma mater would have fully investigated it.

Graduates who completed their degree at a public college or university (29%) are slightly more likely than graduates from private not-for-profit (25%) and private for-profit (24%) colleges to strongly agree that their institution would have fully investigated a reported discrimination issue. Three times as many private for-profit graduates (15%) as private not-for-profit graduates (5%) strongly disagree that their institution would have fully investigated such an issue.

U.S. Graduates' Confidence Their Alma Mater Would Have Fully Investigated Discrimination Report
On a scale of 1 to 5, in which 1 means strongly disagree and 5 means strongly agree, please rate your level of agreement with the following statement: If I had raised an issue about discrimination on campus, I am confident [University] would have fully investigated it.
Strongly agree 4 3 2 Strongly disagree Don't know
% % % % % %
All graduates 27 27 20 8 5 13
Public graduates 29 25 20 7 5 14
Private not-for-profit graduates 25 29 21 11 5 9
Private for-profit graduates 24 20 18 2 15 22
Among those who received a bachelor's degree between 2010 and 2019
ºÚÁÏÍø Alumni Survey, Oct. 24-Nov. 7, 2019

These results are based on interviews with more than 1,600 college graduates who completed their bachelor's degree between 2010 and 2019.

Black, Hispanic Grads Less Confident in Institutions

Only 19% of black graduates strongly agree that their institution would have fully investigated a reported issue of discrimination, compared with 29% of white graduates. Similarly, Hispanic graduates are less likely than white graduates to feel confident in their alma mater's response, with just 23% saying their institution would have fully investigated a claim.

U.S. Graduates' Confidence Their Alma Mater Would Have Fully Investigated Discrimination Report, by Race/Ethnicity
On a scale of 1 to 5, in which 1 means strongly disagree and 5 means strongly agree, please rate your level of agreement with the following statement: If I had raised an issue about discrimination on campus, I am confident [University] would have fully investigated it.
Strongly agree 4 3 2 Strongly disagree Don't know
% % % % % %
All graduates 27 27 20 8 5 13
White graduates 29 26 19 9 5 13
Black graduates 19 22 31 6 9 14
Hispanic graduates 23 33 18 7 6 15
Asian graduates 21 35 20 11 5 7
Among those who received a bachelor's degree between 2010 and 2019
ºÚÁÏÍø Alumni Survey, Oct. 24-Nov. 7, 2019

Female, LGBT Grads Less Likely to Be Confident in Alma Mater

Female graduates (25%) are less likely than male graduates (30%) to say their institution would have fully investigated a discrimination claim. Similarly, by 24% to 28%, graduates who identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender (LGBT) are less likely than their non-LGBT peers to report that their institution would have investigated a discrimination complaint.

U.S. Graduates' Confidence Their Alma Mater Would Have Fully Investigated Discrimination Report, by Subgroup
On a scale of 1 to 5, in which 1 means strongly disagree and 5 means strongly agree, please rate your level of agreement with the following statement: If I had raised an issue about discrimination on campus, I am confident [University] would have fully investigated it.
Strongly agree 4 3 2 Strongly disagree Don't know
% % % % % %
All graduates 27 27 20 8 5 13
Female graduates 25 26 22 10 6 11
Male graduates 30 27 17 7 4 15
LGBT graduates 24 23 25 12 9 8
Non-LGBT graduates 28 27 19 8 4 14
Among those who received a bachelor's degree between 2010 and 2019
ºÚÁÏÍø Alumni Survey, Oct. 24-Nov. 7, 2019

Implications

Equity is foundational to a highly rigorous academic experience. ºÚÁÏÍø data show that for organizations to be truly inclusive, individuals must believe their organization if they reported an issue. For most, this belief that their organization would do the right thing means their institution would fully investigate any complaint. Unfortunately, on the important issue of discrimination, only about a quarter of recent college graduates are confident that their report would have been fully investigated.

These data are similar to the ºÚÁÏÍø Alumni Survey data on sexual assault, which finds 32% of recent college graduates strongly agree that their institution would have fully investigated a report of sexual assault on campus.

The attitudes detailed in this article are important given that universities are becoming increasingly diverse places. Unfortunately, these data also come amid continued accounts of increasing numbers of hate crimes reported across college campuses nationally over the past several years.

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