Differences give mixed-heritage students a common bondPosted in Articles, Campus Life, Census/Demographics, Media Archive, United States on 2013-05-27 18:09Z by Steven |
Differences give mixed-heritage students a common bond
The Los Angeles Times
2013-05-27
Increasing numbers of college campus clubs give voice to those who don’t fit into the traditional perceptions of race.
No matter what their ancestry or their skin color, many members of UCLA’s Mixed Student Union say they have repeatedly been asked the same question by classmates and strangers curious about an ambiguous racial appearance: “What are you?”
And that shared experience, they say, helps to bond the otherwise extremely diverse group, which is devoted to the rising numbers of students who are biracial and from mixed ethnic heritages.
Jenifer Logia, 20, a UCLA sophomore who is one of the Mixed Student Union’s directors, said much of campus life is defined by distinct ethnic, religious or social groupings. But none comfortably fits someone like her — from a family that blends Nicaraguan, Filipino and Guamanian heritages…
Read the entire article here.