Tips & Insights

Tips & Insights provides advice on and examples of technology used to simplify and streamline IR activities, as well as real world examples of visual displays of data (e.g., charts, graphs, maps, tables, pictures). These eAIR features are developed by members.

 
  • Visual Displays of Data
  • 10.15.19

Pepperdine OIE IR Report: Student Diversity by Locale

  • by Jazmin Zane, Director of Institutional Research, Pepperdine University

VDDOct2019

See full report (PDF)

Introduction

Pepperdine is committed to the highest standards of academic excellence and Christian values, where students are strengthened for lives of purpose, service, and leadership. Pepperdine’s mission stems from its Christian heritage, and it is this heritage that contributes to Pepperdine's commitment to student diversity. Incorporating diverse views in the classroom is critical to enriching the educational experience of college students and for preparing students for post-college employment (Turner, Gonzalez, & Wood, 2008). This OIE IR Report provides a snapshot of full-time undergraduate diversity at Pepperdine, in comparison to urban, suburban, and rural institutions in the United States.  

Method 

National data are based on IPEDS Fall Enrollment Survey for 2017, specifically for degree-granting institutions that have full-time, first-year  undergraduates. Degree of urbanization is based on IPEDS methodology (see IPEDS Glossary, Degree of Urbanization), such that institutions are categorized as city, town, suburb, and rural. Analyses exclude non-resident alien students as well as students with an unknown race/ethnicity. In addition, analyses are restricted to full-time undergraduates only.  

Results 

Percentages correspond to non-White/Caucasian students. Nationally,  institutions located in cities and suburbs were more diverse when compared to institutions located in towns and rural communities. Pepperdine’s  undergraduate population was 40% diverse in Fall 2017, which was slightly more diverse than rural communities.  

Conclusion

Structural diversity is reflected in the physical counts of non-White students enrolled at an institution (Hurtado, Griffin, Arellano, & Cuellar, 2008). Pepperdine’s undergraduate student enrollment for non-White students has steadily increased in the past decade (see OIE Diversity Part I Research Brief). Per IPEDS standards, Pepperdine is classified as a large suburb; however, Pepperdine’s remote location in a beach community approximately 35 miles northwest of the City of Los Angeles could be contributing to its  undergraduate diversity numbers being more reflective of a rural area versus a suburb or town. 

Hurtado, S., Griffin, K. A., Arellano, L., & Cuellar, M. (2008). Assessing the value of climate assessments: Progress and future directions. Journal of Diversity in  Higher Education, 1(4), 204-221. 
Turner, C. S. V., Gonzalez, J. C., Wood, J. L. (2008). Faculty of color in academe: What  20 years of literature tells us. Journal of Diversity in Higher Education, 1(3),  139-168. Institutional 
Back to Tips & Insights