Old Ideas in New Skins: Examining Discourses of Diversity on the Websites of 10 Urban-Serving Universities

File(s)
Date
2015-05-01Author
Smith, Simone
Department
Media Studies
Advisor(s)
Richard Popp
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Deficit discourse, the idea that minorities "lack" intellectually, runs through current ideas about diversity in higher education. Diversity is viewed as a policy that helps the deficient. Recent litigation about diversity, Fisher v. University of Texas (2013), embodied the alignment of deficit and diversity. This study examined portrayals, visual and textual, of diversity on the websites of ten urban-serving universities, using a method of critical discourse analysis and a lens of critical race theory, to uncover the ways they defined diversity and if notions of deficit were attached. This study also addressed the ways these universities, a part of the Coalition of Urban-Serving Universities, discussed their communities and if deficit was attached. Diversity was defined as deficient racial minorities and communities as well as diversity as tokens and a form of compliance. The findings of this study show that these college websites, through their portrayals of racial minorities as deficient, duplicate inequality and encourage the maintenance of White hegemony.
Subject
Advertising
College Websites
Deficit
Diversity
Higher Education
Marketing
Permanent Link
http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/94248Type
thesis