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| Office of the Chancellor / Public Affairs |
Thursday, June 26, 2003
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Long Beach Press 6-25-03 Report faults CSU faculty hiring |
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| LONG BEACH Black and Hispanic teachers in the California
State University system are underrepresented despite an increase in minority
hiring by the nation's largest public university system over the past
16 years, according to a report released Wednesday. Overall, the report said, the CSU has increased its number of minorities and women but still struggles to raise the numbers of traditionally underrepresented minorities to a level that reflects the state's population as a whole. Asians, for example, make up 11 percent of California's 35 million population, and the report found 12 percent of CSU's 22,814 faculty members are Asian. But it also found that only 7 percent of CSU's faculty are Hispanic, while that ethnic group makes up 31 percent of the state's population. Blacks account for 7 percent of California's population but only 4 percent of CSU faculty. "For the traditionally underrepresented groups ... the challenge of recruitment still remains, judging by the small number recruited and the low percentages,' the report said. "The challenge for the CSU system is how to keep up with the rapidly changing demographics in California and at the local level.' With more than 400,000 students, the 23-campus system is the largest public university in the nation. The report found the number of female faculty members increased from 31 percent in 1985 to 44 percent in 2000. It also found American Indians increased from .5 percent to .7 percent in 2001. They make up 1 percent of the state's population. State Sen. Richard Alarcon, who chairs the Senate Select Committee on College and University Admissions and Outreach, ordered the report two years ago to gauge the makeup of CSU's faculty. It was completed in April and made available Wednesday. "We are one of the most diverse states in the union. We should have higher numbers,' Alarcon said. "The CSU has to have more aggressive policy statements that are very strongly and clearly focused on diversity.' The San Fernando Valley Democrat said he plans to ask for similar reports on the University of California and the state's community colleges. CSU spokeswoman Clara Potes-Fellow said the CSU has made strides every year, adding that in 2002, which was not included in the report, 28 percent of new faculty hires were minority. "We have made significant progress in increasing the representation of ethnic minority and women faculty, and want to see this trend continuing,' she said. Potes-Fellow said the CSU also requires its faculty applicants to have
the highest level of education, which typically means doctorate degrees.
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These news clips are provided by the Public Affairs Department of The California State University. They are intended for the internal use of The California State University system and should not be redistributed. Questions and submissions may be sent to publicaffairs@calstate.edu. |
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