An assessment of residence hall students' behaviors and attitudes related to racial diversity

Date

2008-05-05T17:03:11Z

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Kansas State University

Abstract

This report highlights the results of a revised diversity survey that was designed to assess the behaviors and attitudes of students who live in the residence halls at Kansas State University (K-State) regarding their interactions with people from diverse backgrounds. Diverse backgrounds, for the purpose of this study, are specifically related to a racial background different than their own. A survey of 25 questions was distributed to every residence hall student via email. The survey that was distributed was adapted from a version that was used previously by the Department of Housing & Dining Services at K-State.

The original survey was based on the Michael P. Tilford competencies that were compiled in 2000-2001 by K-State's Tilford Group. The Tilford competencies are all based on students' multicultural competency. Multicultural competency is defined by the K-State Tilford group as the knowledge, skills and personal attributes needed to live and to work in a diverse world. (K-State Tilford Group, 2007) The revised survey focuses heavily on the skills portion of the Michael P. Tilford competencies and is based on students' self-report.

Description

Keywords

Residence Halls, Racial Diversity, Attitudes, Behaviors

Graduation Month

May

Degree

Master of Science

Department

Department of Educational Leadership

Major Professor

Christy D. Craft

Date

2008

Type

Report

Citation