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Creating
a Culturally Rich Campus for Texas Tech
Never in our lifetime have
the values of higher education -- to promote learning for
life, to improve human knowledge and understanding, and to
help solve the social and economic needs of our communities
and states -- been more important to society. Yet, college
enrollment as a percentage of Texas’ overall population has
dropped over the past decade. Today, only one in five Texans
holds a college degree, and far too many minority citizens
do not participate in higher education opportunities.
Because minority
populations have been historically underrepresented on
college campuses – including Texas Tech – the university
must do more than ever before to include these populations
in higher education opportunities. A core principal of the
administration at Texas Tech University is that a college
education should be available to every willing and
academically able Texan. A second principle is that this
university is open to the expansion of its multicultural
community where diversity is encouraged and inclusion is the
norm.
A growing body of research
on college campuses shows that diversity will be a key
component to educational excellence in the 21st
century. As American Association of College and Universities
past president Carol Geary Schneider says, "Diversity on
campus and in the curriculum is producing new knowledge, new
respect, and new commitment to intergroup community. This is
an extraordinary resource for a democracy that is growing
more diverse by the hour."
Texas Tech University
considers increasing ethnic, racial and economic diversity
on campus a major goal of our current strategic plan. To
that end, we have begun several measures to bring us closer
to our goal. Dr. Juan Munoz joined our faculty last fall in
the College of Education. He also serves as the Special
Assistant to the President for Diversity. Dr. Munoz works
with every college on campus to help recruit a more diverse
faculty and student body. He also encourages faculty to
mentor students from diverse backgrounds who often thrive
when given special attention while adjusting to the
university world.
Through innovative
scholarship programs aimed at first generation college
students and through college recruitment programs that begin
in the early years of K-12 education and last through high
school, Texas Tech hopes to attract the attention of
students and parents who would not otherwise consider the
availability, affordability and potential of a college
education in their families. In this way, we aim to further
our recent progress in expanding diversity in our student
population. Likewise, we will continue to seek well
qualified minority and women candidates for faculty and
staff positions so that our students find a wide diversity
of appropriate role models in the classroom and on campus.
Equally important to
increasing our minority populations on campus is ensuring a
climate on campus where diversity is celebrated and a
variety of multicultural experiences is available in the
classroom as well as in every aspect of campus life. To do
less would rob our current and future students of the
educational experience they will need to flourish in this
new century where boundaries between peoples and geographic
areas are being redefined.
As we hope for peace in the
world and understanding among cultures and countries to
sustain that peace, we must recognize that cultural
isolation and higher education are not philosophical
partners. We must increase our efforts at Texas Tech to
welcome a diverse student body and provide a culturally rich
experience for every student on campus.
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