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Message from the President

Diversity is central to Western's Mission and Strategic Planning Goals, and is considered to be an integral component of a quality education. Our goals recognize the changing composition of society as a whole, and its impact on the world for which students are educated.

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Ethnic Profile of the Student Body

In 1980, 388 students of color were included in Western's student body of 10,616 (3.7%). In each of the last 27 years, many more students of color have discovered that Western is an excellent place to experience higher education, enriching the Western experience for all students. The fall 2007 student body was comprised of 2,259 students from ethnic minority groups, in a total student body that numbered 13,352 (16.9%), due both to new enrollment and improved retention.


Student Organizations

Programming for a diverse student body is the heart and soul of the Ethnic Student Center (ESC). These student-led offices provide individual, social, and cultural enriching activities to the campus and the community. The ESC officially opened in 1991, and is a department within the structure of the Associated Students of WWU. Its web site provides links to affiliated clubs.

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Diversity and Scholarships

Nearly 200 Multicultural Achievement Program (MAP) scholarships are awarded each year to students who provide leadership in campus programs, student clubs, community activism, and other activities that celebrate diversity and promote understanding. The Office of Admissions coordinates new student scholarship selection and Student Financial Resources coordinates the selection process for current Western students. Applicants must demonstrate solid academic abilities, strong leadership qualities and a commitment to multicultural issues and activities. Financial need may be considered. Funding for the MAP scholarship has more than doubled in the past two years.

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Multicultural Support Programs

Student Outreach Service's (SOS) commitment to underrepresented and multicultural students is to promote academic success, retention, and graduation. Students receive personalized academic advising, assistance in the development of their educational plan, positive intervention for those in academic risk, and helpful referral services to academic departments and support resources.

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News and Research

WWU Professor Studies Korean Populations in US

WWU professor emeritus Robert Hyung-chan Kim recently studied the many Korean people living and working in the Pacific Northwest. His resulting article, “Koreans in the Seattle-Tacoma Area,” focuses on the approximately 53,000 Koreans along the Interstate-5 corridor between Vancouver, Wash., and Blaine.

The article appears in the book “In Search of American Dream: 100 Year History of Korean Immigration to America,” which marks the 100th anniversary of the first group of Korean immigrants to come to the United States.

Dr. Kim has been at Western since 1971 and has taught in the Woodring College

of Education and American cultural studies department. Although he retired in 2001, he still teaches several classes at Western each year and conducts research with the Seoul National University and Koryo University in Jochiwon, Korea.

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Academic Program Highlights

Since the study of diverse cultures and perspectives is implicit in Western’s strategic goals, examination of multicultural perspectives, values and literatures is interwoven into many classes throughout the university’s curriculum. All Western students take courses in the area of comparative, gender and multicultural studies as part of the General University Requirements.

Shannon Point Marine Center Minorities in Undergraduate Marine Science Program

The Minorities in Marine Science Undergraduate Program at Western’s Shannon Point Marine Center in Anacortes, Washington, recently garnered national honors.

In a March 2002 White House ceremony, Shannon Point director and program founder Stephen Sulkin accepted the 2002 Presidential Award for Excellence in Science, Mathematics and Engineering Mentoring. Shannon Point was one of six institutions in the nation President Bush honored for achieving “remarkable” increases in “participation of minorities, women and disabled students” in scientific fields. The National Science Foundation administers the award, which carries a $10,000 grant. The following day, also in Washington, D.C., program director Brian Bingham was one of six nationwide to receive a Management Excellence Award from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) for “promoting diversity.” Dr. Bingham won WWU's Diversity Achievement Award in June 2003.

“Shannon Point is an example of what Western stands for,” says Western President Karen W. Morse, “an excellent undergraduate learning experience, including the opportunity for research undertaken with strong faculty mentoring. Under the leadership of Dr. Sulkin and Dr. Bingham,” she adds, “the Minorities in Marine Science Undergraduate Program also demonstrates the importance of multicultural education at Western, our commitment to diversity in both programs and people, and our

faculty’s ability to create innovative programs to fulfill that commitment.”

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Law, Diversity, and Justice

In 1991 Fairhaven College developed the Law and Diversity Program (LDP) for students who were interested in law, diversity, and access to the legal system for under-served communities. The Program welcomed students who desired to effect change and who had the potential to act as leaders and role models in their communities using legal knowledge and processes. Graduates from the Law and Diversity Program have obtained positions as attorneys for private and public firms, in city government and legal services, and at the U.S. Department of Education and the Environmental Protection Agency. Graduates have also pursued careers in the justice system as Juvenile Probation Officers, Human Service Caseworkers, Prisoner Rights Activists, law enforcement personnel, and as Union negotiators. Some have gone on to faculty positions at other Universities where they teach on a variety of law, diversity and justice issues.

To better keep pace with Fairhaven's core mission of social justice, the Program has expanded into a regular plan of study at Fairhaven under the Law, Diversity and Justice (LDJ) Concentration.The concentration is open to ALL students enrolled at Fairhaven College, and endeavors to increase the number of people from underrepresented groups or who want to help underrepresented groups, and who are seeking careers in law and social justice. Fairhaven College has also created the Center for Law, Diversity and Justice (CLDJ) to support the work of students, faculty and community members around these issues.

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