Recruiting underrepresented minority students
The last couple weeks have posed a challenge, as several people have contacted me (mostly out of the blue), asking me for ideas about specific steps they can take to improve the recruitment of minority students. This isn’t my field, but, I realize I’ve put myself in this position, because it’s a critical issue and I discuss it frequently. I’m just one of many who work in minority-serving institutions.
I realize that most of the suggestions I’ve given to people (but not advice) are generalized. If several folks are writing to me, I imagine there are many more of y’all out there who might be thinking the same thing but not writing. Hence this post. Just with my suggestions.
If you are really serious about minority recruitment (and I’m going to be judgey here, but really, you need to be), then you should know what literature says about effective minority recruitment practices. There is a substantial set of peer-reviewed literature about minority recruitment but (just like the scholarship on pedagogy in higher education,) many who have the greatest need for this information aren’t reading about it.
For starters, in my field, this Manual of Best Practices for Recruiting and Retaining Underrepresented Groups in Ecology and the Environmental Sciences, developed by the Organization for Tropical Studies, is spot on, even though it’s almost a decade old. Many things — unfortunately — haven’t changed.
I’m not writing this to tell you best practices. I’m writing this to encourage you to develop a mindset that might fundamentally change how you approach recruitment. You need to find what works for you, but since most diversity efforts aren’t working (evidenced by the lack of change despite investment), then whatever you’re doing can probably be improved. (But there are some places that do it well and they can serve as models.)
Fall is recruiting season. This is when summer research programs for undergraduates are ramping up to receive applications, when doctoral programs are courting students and when student are contacting PIs and their graduate programs. If you’re looking to increase minority representation in your program, then Fall is when your plans operationalize. If you’re running a graduate program, or a summer undergraduate research program, what do you plan to improve? Or are your numbers wholly satisfactory to you?
I’m not a fan of the pipeline metaphor, but breaking recruitment into stages makes sense. If you’re an outfit that wants to increase the proportion of minority students that are in your program, you need to:
Identify the students you want
Entice those students into applying
Accept those students
Invest in the success of these students
If you’re in a position like me — in an institution with minority undergraduates that deserve more opportunities than are provided to them — then the flip side of this coin is:
Prepare my students to look like the kind of students that you want
Train, support and encourage students into applying
Build relationships with people in the hope they’ll accept my students
Continue to mentor my students as they might not end up in a supportive place
This post is about the first point: What promising undergraduates researchers look like.
Why is it that minority scientists are so poorly represented in graduate programs? If you think the answer is that they’re inadequately trained and prepared as undergraduates, I’m here to tell you that’s full of crap. Yeah, training can be better, but there are lot of people who have the potential to be awesome and are ready for grad school, as long as the grad school is ready to support them.
Graduate programs should recruit students with great research potential. It’s pretty clear that test scores (like the GRE) don’t predict success in a research career, and undergraduate GPA isn’t that predictive either. Okay, I get it that you don’t want to take a student into a graduate program if their performance as an undergraduate suggests they can’t hack it when things are higher stakes. And I agree. But what predicts grad school success? Here is a substantial argument how the GRE is just useless for predicting how someone will do in grad school after you take into account socioeconomic factors. (Here’s an annotated bibliography about the GRE as a predictor of graduate success from the Graduate Diversity Program at UC Berkeley.)
The populations of “low-income students” and “first-generation students” and “underrepresented minority students” are distinct, and it’s erroneous and counterproductive to conflate them. It also would be ignorant to fail to recognize that the socioeconomic disparities among STEM students at the university level intersect heavily with race and ethnicity. If an undergraduate institution serves one of these populations, it’s also probably serving those two other populations as well*.
Universities that are highly ranked — and are held in high regard by people who do recruitment — tend to have particularly low proportions of students who are members of underrepresented minorities. Even universities which have multi-billion dollar endowments, who say they invest really heavily into minority recruitment, just don’t have that many minorities. Prestigious institutions think they are scrambling for the “low-hanging fruit” of a low number of high-performing minority students** that are prepared for their level of rigor.
It is true that not that many students from underrepresented groups have assembled the social capital to access things like prestigious undergraduate institutions, REU programs, and research opportunities in high-performing labs. The ones that break this code are the ones that graduate programs want to enroll.
When you ask someone who is shopping around for PhD students, ask them what they think is the template for someone who is a good prospect. Setting aside grades and scores, here are other criteria: coming from a “good lab,” coming from a “good university,” having publications, presented at conferences, can converse in an engaged and informed manner about their research interests, has impressive writing statements, and impeccable letters of reference.
I don’t think those criteria are inherently unreasonable criteria on their face (aside from the “good university” thing, which is mostly a load of crap). But, and this is a big but:
When we use those criteria integratively, as we do nowadays, what we get is the status quo — the continued underrepresentation of the groups that people say they want to include. Why is this? Because minorities disproportionally attend universities that are not “good universities,” which is a huge selection factor when people are shopping around for future academics. The pool is always going to skew towards white. Moreover, the pool is skewed towards the people who have access to opportunities that are designed to build the other criteria, which are the overrepresented students. (This is the phenomenon that some folks call privilege.)
If we are truly going to diversify, then we just can’t draw students from the population that has a lot of social capital. In other words, those are the students that navigated the system to get into “good” universities, and have impressive research opportunities, and have the experience that enables them to write cover letters that knock your socks off. We need to draw from the broader population, because the way we’re doing it now isn’t working, because the way people choose ends up in selections that skew white, and it also fails to even consider supporting many people who have the capacity to become amazing researchers.
A lot of the things that make undergraduates more competitive in the academic market are beyond their control, if they don’t have the money or the access to opportunity. I’m asking you to consider the notion that the academic talent — the capacity for research success — is not disproportionately located in prestigious universities.
Here is what I’m asking of you: Please reconsider your template for what constitutes a promising undergraduate.
I’m asking you to consider the notion that universities that you’ve never heard of before (like my own, California State University Dominguez Hills), have many students that can go on to grad school and become rockstars, if only they are provided the opportunity. I’m asking you to consider the notion that the reason that students end up in prestigious institutions is not because they have more academic talent, but because they have been provided opportunities for them to cultivate the demonstration of that talent in a manner that other members of the academic social class will recognize as talented.
I am convinced that I — and all of my fellow colleagues at less prestigious institutions — have a lot of students that can be amazing in grad school. But they’re not getting accepted at nearly the rate that they should be — or into institutions that can greatly benefit from having them. Because they don’t conform to the template that people use to accept graduate students.
What people then tell me — as they were so kind to mention in comments in my post about inequities in the distribution of NSF graduate fellowships — that this needs to be fixed by greater mentorship and investment at the K-12 and undergraduate levels. Um, thanks for that memo. Of course I realize that the problem is a shortage of opportunity and quality support. So what you’re saying they just need better opportunities? And until then, we’ll just accept that graduate programs continue to fail to recruit students from underrepresented groups? The wealthy and the white have been getting better opportunities in the US since its inception, and it’s still that way now. And we’re not going to change it if we just say, “Oh, well, that’s the way things are.” If you’re running an undergraduate research program or a graduate program, then you’re in a situation where you can actually change the distribution of opportunities. But to do it well, you’ll need to revise your template, because using the contemporary template, the inequities persist.
Yeah, the students who went to expensive prep schools and prestigious Ivies, liberal arts colleges and highly-ranked research institutions will always look better on paper than students who didn’t. If you think students coming from more prestigious institutions are inherently academically better and are prepared to become better researchers then a) you’re naive about how socioeconomic realities affect people, b) you would benefit from more direct experience about what happens on a day to day basis in regional state universities and c) you’re part of the problem perpetuating the inequities that we’re trying to fix.
I work very hard to get my students to present well to conform to the accepted template of ‘promising researcher.’ But I wish this were met by an equivalent effort by people who should be recruiting our students, to learn how students without as much social capital can be amazing researchers even if they don’t seem to match up as well using conventional measures.
Okay, then, you must be wondering, How is it that you can measure research potential without using the standard template?
The answer is obvious, but the implementation takes a huge amount of investment: You know it when you see it. You know a student has research potential when you directly observe that research potential.
Let me explain with a personal example. There are several students who’ve worked with in me in recent years who are uh-MAY-zing. Spectacular. Massive rockstar potential. But let me tell you, if you saw their application — or if they sent you an initial query — you probably would disagree with me. Scores are meh, the grades are inconsistent, and they do not write with the polish or sophistication that you would expect. And they probably are demonstrating a lack of confidence.
What would it take for you to change your mind? Well, maybe a week, or a few months. All I know is that when people have worked alongside these students and actually get to know them as individuals, they’re willing to throw a lot of those classic indicators out the window and things change. When my students work at La Selva Biological Station, they’re sharing space with PhD students, postdocs, and PIs that come through. The ones who get to know these students have no doubt in their prospects for research success.
I’m not asking you to take a chance on students who are a higher risk. I’m asking you to rethink how you assess “student quality” and realize that if we recommend a talented research student to you, that they actually are not high risk. And if they don’t do well, it’s not because they don’t have the capacity to succeed, but because they didn’t receive adequate support (which happens to minority students in the primarily white institutions that invest in recruitment but not on the follow-through).
There are a lot of amazing students out there that can excel in your graduate program, but they’re not even applying because they realize they’re not being taken seriously. It’s not easy to get students from non-prestigious institutions to apply to prestigious far-away places (but that’s a whole ‘nother issue).
How can you access this pool of talented students who can increase the diversity of your program? Invest in relationships. With your time and your money. You can’t just email everybody you know at minority-serving institutions and ask them to send their best students to you. Because, trust me, people are doing this in droves. It doesn’t actually generate that many applications anyway. You actually need to woo people. You need to built trust. You need to let folks know that they will be wanted and supported.
How do you build that trust and that atmosphere of mutual respect? You build relationships with the institutions and the faculty that work in those institutions, who work with these students on a daily basis. This itself requires a lot of people to make a whole other mental leap and abandon another template. Because the norm, as I’ve experienced it, is that we’re not seen as peers. If folks can’t really consider the faculty as valued peers, then they’re not going to take their students as serious research prospects. If you really want to recruit underrepresented students beyond the relatively limited number that have worked their way into more prestigious institutions, then you’re going to have to take non-prestigious universities and their faculty seriously. And build relationships with us. Collaborate with us so much that you get to know our students. Bring us into the fold.
In the ten years I’ve been teaching at a minority-serving institution, do you know how many people have ever contacted me and said, “Do you have any students to work in my lab this summer?” and then followed through by taking on and funding students in their lab? Here’s the answer: ONE. One person. Anybody with a disciplinary NSF grant could have done this by getting an REU supplement from their program director. But only one person has.
Do you know how many people write me and say, “Could your minority students apply to our REU program?” MORE THAN I COULD POSSIBLY RECALL.
There is a huge difference between the first approach and the second approach. The first request came from a colleague who knows and respects me and my judgment. The second kind of request comes from people who want to cook the books to have a more diverse pool, and maybe take students if they fit the traditional template.
The first approach resulted in an experience that was transformative. The second approach results in, well, nothing really. There are a lot of reasons for that, and if you’re familiar with the scholarship on recruiting underrepresented minority students, you probably have a handle on this.
I’d like to focus back on the folks who asked me for concrete suggestions about what they can do to genuinely increase diversity in their summer research programs and graduate programs. I hope this post provided some perspective that is useful. But I guess a bulleted list might be good too:
Don’t just ask people to apply, make sure that faculty specifically invite their peers at minority-serving institutions who have students who offer a good research fit.
If you’re trying to build up a campus that can offer participants in a summer-long research program, offering a one-week opportunity for “research recruits” can reduce the barrier to applications for a whole summer. Also, this can help build relationships with a particular campus.
Stop using test scores if you are still using them.
Lower your GPA minimum threshold. (Even students who are above the threshold can find it intimidating to apply if they aren’t well above it.)
Recruit from local campuses. Pick up the telephone, and call a colleague at that university in your city that you’ve never even thought of visiting.
Make sure that your graduate admissions committee has professor(s) who are first-generation college students who attended a community college or a non-prestigious regional public university.
When you’re inviting people for anything (seminars, workshops, symposia, panels, whatever), include institutional diversity as a criterion. If your “diversity” doesn’t include minority-serving institutions, then you’re missing an opportunity to build connections to people at institutions that serve the population you’re trying to recruit.
What else am I missing?
*HBCUs (Historically Black Colleges and Universities) are an entirely different thing, though, with which I have scant experience.
** These folks have never heard of Billie Holiday? This is, literally, a horrifying metaphor for the recruitment of minority students.