
According to the interview, leading business schools have been working for years to increase diversity. The foundation claims that 18 of the top 30 business schools have increased their numbers of minority students over the last 10 years. The average went from 9.3 percent in 2000 to 13.4 percent in 2010. The numbers include underrepresented minorities who are not Asian students.
The results are peculiar and potentially misleading for a couple of reasons. First, the study claims that the Johnson School of Management at Cornell University led the way with an alleged 21 percent enrollment of underrepresented minorities in their MBA program in 2010. My brother graduated from the Johnson School MBA program this fall, and I was incredibly disappointed by the fact that among the hundreds of students graduating that day, I could count the number of black students on one hand. Of course, African Americans are not the only underrepresented minority group, but the black presence in this business school (as well as most other leading institutions) is virtually non-existent.
The second point of contention is that there is a presumption that business school diversity starts and stops with the composition of the student body. All the while, no one spends much time discussing the fact that many of the leading business schools, Cornell especially, are woefully inadequate when it comes to the numbers of underrepresented minorities on the faculty. Even when faculty positions are granted, they are typically visiting positions or openings designed solely for window dressing, with no relevance within the pre-existing power structure. This was a large part of the reason that many accused Supreme Court justice Elena Kagan of being a racist, given that she didn't hire a single black, Latino or Native American faculty member in over 30 hires as Dean of the Harvard University Law School. Given the thousands of highly-trained black professionals in the United States, such results are disgraceful, unacceptable, and nothing more than Americanized apartheid.
The disparities in minority representation in American business schools is symptomatic of white supremacy in quite a few ways. Most significantly, there is a perception that the lack of minority presence is due to African Americans simply being unqualified or unwilling to "step up to the plate" to take advantage of the opportunities in question. This is the "lazy black people theory," that presents the elitists who run such institutions as benevolent caretakers who are simply hoping that minorities will walk through the doors these universities have been gracious enough to open for them. The truth, however, is that many of these doors are closed, and I've got an email box full of notes from angry black professors who've jumped through all the hoops of qualification only to find that they're being consistently rejected by predominantly white institutions (one professor interviewed at a university in the southeast and was told that she didn't get the job because she talked too loudly during her interview).
There is also the belief that minorities are simply not good enough to get jobs or attend many of these institutions. The truth is that we are just as qualified as whites, but because whites are the standard bearers on educational achievement with the ability to reward and punish, there is the mistake of presuming that being different means that you are somehow inferior. I've gone through that problem at Syracuse University, given that my work in the black community has almost never been acknowledged or respected by any of those in the university's administration (Cornel West and Michael Eric Dyson also went through similar problems at universities that refuse to recognize black scholarship as being important). If I were a white guy doing work of similar magnitude, I'd surely be sprinkled with a long list of awards and accolades. Thankfully, my mother taught me as a child that when you're black, you should expect to do twice as much for half the reward, so being rejected as an African American male never really bothered me. But anyone who truly cares about creating real diversity in American business schools will realize that a diverse population implies that a heterogeneous set of ideas are accepted and not that the black people will simply "civilize themselves" and learn to behave like their white counterparts.
As I looked on the stage of faculty at my brother's graduation at Cornell, I found myself amazed that some of the most brilliant minds in the world have been convinced that black people are absent from their ranks primarily because there is no black person on earth qualified to sit next to them. Rather than understanding that they live in a nation that has spent 400 years relegating people of color to the back of the socio-economic bus, some would rather believe that black people are simply just not good enough. That, my friends, is white supremacy at its finest.
Dr. Boyce Watkins is the founder of the Your Black World Coalition and a Scholarship in Action Resident of the Institute for Black Public Policy. To have Dr. Boyce commentary delivered to your email, please click here. 
Comments: (12)
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By: jamarcus on 12/28/2010 6:52PM
Underrepresented minorities inclue Hispanics, Native Americans, and African Americans. The colleges get their numbers to increase by admitting lots of "white" hispanics who are from South American countries or even Florida Cubans who are more white and conservative than Glenn Beck or Rush Limbaugh.
We as African Americans can start getting our doctorates in business fields and an option to consider is the www.phdproject.com which assist underrepresented minorities
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By: WiFi Works on 12/28/2010 7:44PM
The leading organization addressing diversity at top business schools is Management Leadership for Tomorrow. They do a great job of helping qualified minority applicants navigate the application process at top tier schools. Go to www.ml4t.org for more info They are the reason why I'm currently getting my MBA from a top 5 b-school.
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By: Wallington on 12/29/2010 8:33AM
Articles are created to express different body of knowledge. That is why I admire writers who are passionate of doing such incredible job. I salute you guys. By the way, I like your post, I look forward for your subsequent post’s…
Thanks, Wallington, Webmaster - Multicultural Health Resources
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By: steve stinson on 12/30/2010 7:31AM
Again your racist commentary of ghetto logic continues. We have a Black President what is our excuse now? Is the NBA disversfied, NFL-please tell the truth.
What are the real reasons- 1 in 4 black eight graders cant pass a national math exam, close to 50 % of blacks dont graduate from high school, blacks average 300 points less on SAT scores(maybe they should include ebonics?) The average black 12th grader reads at the 8th grade level. 1 in 4 black men between the ages of 19 and 27 are in the criminal justice system, 1 in 16 black females.
So statistics tell us the a fast majority of black young people are not eligible to go to college let alone a graduate program. Lets take some responsibilty for our own communities and quit crying the race card. Its funny we dont here asian americans complaining-your right there not of color? There should be no admissions based on race, race based-isnt that the definition of racism?
Maybe thats how you got your PHD-they had to hold a spot for a black person regardless if they had the highest qualifications or was the best candidate?
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By: Mitch on 12/31/2010 5:56PM
The entire U.S. school (black and white) system scores at the bottom globally because of white supremacy or dumb whites looking for WMD and GWB! Know anybody who is anti-intellectual?
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By: steve stinson on 12/30/2010 7:29AM
Dr Boyce your own history is a testament to our problems-born out of wedlock to teenage parents, having a child your self as a teenager to an un wed mother. These are the reasons that as a group we dont move forward,according to Wikipedia you still have self esteem issues-this angry racist commentary will not cure those problems.
You would be better off to work toward improving test scores ,families and having us take personable responsibility for our actions, than continue to run racist pieces-but if you did that how would you get paid.
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By: Mitch on 12/30/2010 9:29PM
The republikklan party is holding the USA back! White supremacy costs three -trillion dollars a year. No wonder 50 million people don't have healthcare. It's a very sad person whose only hope in life is founded on white supremacy.
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By: Mitch on 12/31/2010 5:40PM
Another very sad thing about this white supremacist nation is college football and basketball teams with predominantly black teams having the nerve to have very few black students and NO blacks on the teams graduate. Hateful and UNCHRISTIAN...what would Jesus say or do? Whites love you when you play for the Big Ten but hate you when it comes to economics (black male unemployment in Milwaukee is 65, sixty-five per cent)!
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By: steve stinson on 12/31/2010 4:08PM
Mitch-your comments are the ghetto logic from a jail cell that got us into our current situation.
We have a black President, give it up.
When we repeat ghetto logic like it has evidence in the literature, like it was from Jesus, we repeat the same behaviors that holds us back. Its time to take responsibility for our own personal actions! The race card is played out, like the author of this article, we hold on to this card for its entitlements which only holds us back. What would Jesse (father of bastard ), Rev Al (remember Twaina) they do if we ever let go and moved on. Race is a buisness in our neighborhood.
What would you do Mitch-now you can blame all of your behavior are the boogeyman-I cant make it the man is holding me down-I'll just stay home and smoke weed , bum off my babys mother?
Lets force diversity into atheltics, where only 13% of the athletes could be black, thats fair? Thats our stats.
Diversify the NBA an NFL. Why is it every black discussion has to include atheletics? 70% of NFL players file chapter 2 years after leaving the NFL, Dr J just got his house foreclosed. Is this how we set out standards-Vick, OJ, Tyson the list goes on.
The stats I put in my earlier comment are well known and well documented. You cant blame the white man for 50% of blacks dropping out of high school, averaging 300points less than the national average on SAT scores. 1 in 4 black young men in the prison system. The number black young men and women that are elgible for college shrinks fast, let alone an MBA program.
The comments about the author found on Wikipedia if true are the real reasons we flounder and hold ourselves back. Ghetto behavior-and whites are rapidly catching up. the law of physics holds true, everything runs downhill unless some positive energy is put in to reverse the flow.
It makes us feel good to rage on about BS that doesnt help or improve anything, or maybe we could get mad you said something ,disrepected me and we get violent, shoot each other. Its time to grow up ,get off of entitlements take responsibity for our own actions, pay for our own children, become the people that God wants us to be.
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By: Drew on 12/31/2010 9:41AM
It time to start rebuilding out Black College and University. Go home. It been a proven fact we got to start taken care of each other. Education is a main factor in our daily lives, and we have the best college, best instructor right here in our own community. I am planing on returning to school, the school I have chosen is Shaw University in North Carolina.
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