DURHAM, N.C. (AP) A group of about two dozen Duke University students urged administrators Tuesday to create a better climate and provide more financial support for black students, saying theyve been disappointed so far in how top officials have reacted to their viewpoints. The students, almost all of whom were black, unsuccessfully sought a meeting with university President Richard Brodhead at his campus office in hopes of explaining a document they describe as a call to action for the prestigious school.
Concerns range from the future location of a black culture center to the lack of support for a black student groups annual event and a recent study that suggested African-American students switched to less-difficult majors.
The most immediate cause for students anger is an as-yet unpublished study by Duke researchers saying black students match the GPA of whites over time in part because they switch to majors that require less study time and have less stringent grading standards.
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Poster Comment:
Whatchoo mean Ethnic Studies ain't be as hard as Law or Medicine? Dat's rayciss right der, sho' 'nuff. Muddafugga.