Using
"Fall
Enrollments"
and "The
American Freshman"
survey
data, this article addresses two related questions: How has
the
ethnic-racial composition of various
types
of higher educational institutions changed in recent years, and how have chances of attending various
types
of institutions changed for students from
different
ethnic-racial backgrounds? Within the higher education system, the signs of stability outweighed
the
signs of change. The racial composition of the student bodies at 2-year and 4-year institutions was remarkably similar throughout the 1980s.
The
distribution of students from each minority group among the main divisions of
the
system also
remained
largely
steady,
suggesting that no group "traded down" in the educational hierarchy to cope with rising costs. At the
elite
Intitutions, Blacks did not lose ground but remained underrepresented; the greater ethnic-racial diversity at these institutions largely reflected an infusion of Asian-American students. In light of these data, explanations of minority enrollments that stress
the
impact of financial aid or political struggle are open to question.