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21% of Ohio State faculty represent minorities

klein.340@osu.edu

Published: Monday, January 28, 2013

Updated: Monday, January 28, 2013 21:01

Like the student body, Ohio State’s faculty has a low representation of minorities, according to data from Ohio State’s Human Resources Office.

For the 2012 Fall Semester, about 77 percent of the total faculty — including teaching and non-teaching positions — are white, about 21 percent are racial minorities and 6 percent did not disclose its race or ethnicity, according to data from the OSU Human Resources’ website.

About 14.5 percent of the student body are minorities for Fall Semester, according to university data.

Aside from race and ethnicity, male faculty exceed females. Women only make up about 33 percent of the faculty population. This is lower than female students who made up about 49 percent of the student body Fall Semester, according to university data.

Valerie Lee, vice provost of the Office of Diversity and Inclusion, said in an email the statistics on minorities working for OSU do not surprise her.

“Our data are part of a national crisis reflecting the need to more aggressively recruit a diverse faculty for 21st century student populations,” she said. “The disparity between how future student populations will look and how the professoriate will look will continue to increase without intentional intervention.”

The university will continue to build a culture of inclusion for students, staff and professors, Lee said.

“It will take multiple initiatives to address the shortage of an ethnically and racially diverse professoriate,” she said. “There is no easy solution. The academy is facing the challenge of trying to solve a problem that it and the larger society created decades ago when its doors were not open to all.”

Some faculty members are also committed to becoming more diversity within their own departments, such as Cynthia Selfe, an English professor.

Selfe said although the Department of English has a good representation of women, her department has a long way to go toward representing minorities.

“We need a great deal more attention in that area,” she said. “(However) we’re making great strides.”

She said she is part of a team working to recruit applicants for the English department.

“Our job is to find the best applicant in the world,” she said. “We want a diverse and vibrant faculty and that’s what we been aiming toward.”

Some students, like Sarah Weatherford, a first-year in athletic training, said they perceived the university as being diverse, although she has noticed that many of her professors are white.

“I would think at a bigger school you would have more diversity,” she said.

David Chinn, a third-year in business administration, said he thinks the faculty is sufficiently diverse, and said race and ethnicity should not matter in the hiring process.

“As long as they know the material and are able to communicate it (then) I don’t have a problem with it,” he said.

According to 2010 U.S. Census Bureau data, 61.5 percent of the population in Columbus is white, 28 percent is African-American, 4.1 percent is Asian, 3.3 percent has two or more races and American Indians and Hawaiians make up less than 1 percent of the population.

Columbus also has a 51.2 percent female population.

As for Ohio, 82.7 percent of the population is white, 12.2 percent is African-American, 2.1 percent identifies with two or more races, 1.7 percent is Asian and American Indians and Hawaiians have less than 1 percent of the state population, according to Census data.

Lee said the university would continue its goals to become more diverse.

“We want to continue to take those steps that ensure the widest possible applicant pool,” she said.

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18 comments

Current OSU Student
Wed Jan 30 2013 13:01
As a current student of The Ohio State University, I do not care about the religion, ethnicity, or color of my proffesor. The only thing that should matter in the hiring process is that they are qualified, great teachers first and researcher second, have great communication skills, are competent in using technology for the classroom of the 21st century, but above all they should speak fluent English. This is a world class school, but keep in mind this is a school in the mid west of the United States. The hurdles we face as students should not be translation of lecture, is should be the material we are trying to learn and digest.
former student
Wed Jan 30 2013 07:39
I have a dream that I will be judged by the content of my character not the color of my skin- MLK allowing race/ethnicity into decision, for any reason, is being a bigot
Anonymous
Tue Jan 29 2013 23:16
When 82.7% of Ohio is white and only 77% of OSU is, isn't the problem that whites are underrepresented?
Ratios
Tue Jan 29 2013 22:38
The student:faculty ratio for white & minority may be balanced, but what does the overall picture say? Mmmhmm. still messed up. If education is the great leveler than why is the road still so enormously uneven.
Diversity is Great
Tue Jan 29 2013 22:35
Diversity is great. I don't know why anyone would get so upset about hiring more brilliant people of color! I'm comfortable with who I am. I don't imply that minorities aren't qualified :) If I felt that way. I'd say it loud and proud and move out of America.
I Love Diversity and I'm Secure with Myself
Tue Jan 29 2013 22:33
Diversity is awesome.
Did I Mention..
Tue Jan 29 2013 22:31
That nowhere in this article does it state that OSU is officially hiring for stupid minorities and doesn't want the "of course" ultra qualified fabulous white majority people to apply. Oh yeah! It doesn't.

The hire for quality not color is the number one reason for turning minorities down for their color and covering it all up as "we hire the best" LOL.

Did I mention that there are smart qualified minority people and this article was not about some crazy notion that OSU is now hiring idiots who happen to be minorities and that all the white geniuses are sad poor victimized people who can't even get in at Harvard. cry me a river.

If you argue with me on this then please go home early. This lame argument has been around as long as "oh but they are more like heathens and thus we musn't let them in colleges and instead we must let them only do our chores" LOL.

The "Hire for Talent Not Color" Argument is Racist and Let's Stop Pretending (You know what you mean)
Tue Jan 29 2013 22:24
This article does NOT reflect "hire for color not talent" but it is very funny that people automatically assume that when an institution wants to hire people of color that standards go out of the window. That is a bias, prejudice, and essentially racist assumption that is very convenient for "some people" who "are never happy" with most of the pie. It is a great way to never hire more minorities and to always keep that great imbalance that does not reflect the people of America, my 'Murica, land of the free.
Insecurity and Inane Table-Turning
Tue Jan 29 2013 22:15
Remember this whilst you bash the minorities and migrants of the world, of which you once were.
"Nothing in the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity. " - MLK Jr.
Check Yourself
Tue Jan 29 2013 22:10
Hey, I bet all the comment in here are ignorant and defensive for no reason! check yourself people. what makes you really upset here is an insecurity and ignorance within you.
Anonymous
Tue Jan 29 2013 14:59
So all the OSU students who didn't disclose are white? Are you kidding?
Anonymous
Tue Jan 29 2013 09:42
This article exactly represents "hire for the talent not for the color" but in the opposite way that you're using it. While it seems like most of the previous commenters would like to think this isnt true, we need people to stop NOT being hired because of ethnicity. While I understand that it is easier to just blame people and think they have an easier ride because theyre not white, please just open your eyes and see the bigger picture here.
Anonymous
Tue Jan 29 2013 09:34
White people in America will eventually be the minorities. Those numbers will change as time goes on.

As for now, I would like to be taught by whoever is the best. If there are two equally qualified professors but one will make OSU more diverse, then I have no problem with the university hiring the minority based off of that.

Anonymous
Tue Jan 29 2013 09:05
How ironic as more and more people ask my MINORITY child did he/she like grad from Osu as the accomplishments are starting to get more attention these articles are popping up (even local police in our city wanted to know how was attending Osu)???? Don't worry Osu I didn't send my child to your school based on "minority" numbers. I wanted a GREAT edu to survive in the REAL world!!!! NO COMPLAINTS HERE!!! GREAT article though! Anon is correct the campus reflects OHIO
Nanny Police
Tue Jan 29 2013 07:39
Oh boy, still stuck on stupid at OSU I see. Hire for the talent not the color.
Anonymous
Tue Jan 29 2013 01:00
Why is this even an issue? Shouldn't we be more focused on hiring people that are most qualified for the job based on merit alone vice ethnicity? I mean, the only way to have actual equal equality is to stop labeling people "minority" or "majority."
Anonymous
Mon Jan 28 2013 23:55
Get busy applying for jobs minorities. This is inexcusable! As for white folks, instead of wanting to teach at OSU, why don't you go to that place up "north" and teach those folks a little Buckeye Pride.
Anonymous
Mon Jan 28 2013 23:36
Sounds like the faculty mirrors the population State of Ohio almost exactly. So why does this article reference "low representation of minorities"? It's not the University of Columbus. Some people are never happy.




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