Admissions Office reaches out to LGBT recruits

To recruit more lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and ally students to Penn, the LGBT Center and the Office of Undergraduate Admissions have begun reaching out to Gay-Straight Alliance groups at local Philadelphia high schools.

Bob Schoenberg, director of Penn's LGBT Center, said the center has been working with the Admissions Office for several years to recruit more "LGBT and LGBT-friendly" students.

In the past, these outreach attempts have included representing Penn at LGBT college fairs and training Kite and Key tour guides to emphasize the availability of LGBT student resources.

Now the LGBT Center and the Admissions Office have begun sending invitations to members of local GSAs to visit during QPenn, Penn's annual LGBT student-pride and -awareness week.

The outreach works to recruit students who have self-identified as LGBT or allies and to gain demographic information for at least some of each incoming class' LGBT students, said Schoenberg.

Jordan Pascucci, assistant director of on-campus programs in Undergraduate Admissions, is working with Schoenberg on the GSA outreach program.

She explained that this idea has been developing over the last several months, which is why the Admissions Office has only reached out to local GSAs so far.

With the help of the Mazzoni Center, an LGBT health center in Philadelphia, and Ninah Harris, the building and program coordinator of Penn's LGBT Center, Pascucci has contacted GSA chapters and guidance offices in all Philadelphia public schools. She sent each an e-mail explaining a visiting opportunity that combines LGBT life at Penn with admissions information.

"It's just about making sure all students know that they're a priority," said Pascucci.

Because potential students have no way to self-identify as LGBT except in application essays, there is no way to glean information about an incoming class' sexual orientation and gender-identity profile, while campus cultural centers - like the Pan-Asian American Community House and Makuu, the center for black students - can get this demographic information and easily welcome incoming students as a result.

"We have no way of knowing what the current census of LGBT students is at Penn," said Schoenberg.

There has been much national debate over the last several years over whether to put a question regarding sexual orientation or gender identity on individual college applications or the Common Application, which is used by hundreds of schools.

This kind of self-identifying question could potentially pose problems, especially for students who have not yet not come out to parents or the college advisors who review their applications.

Without such a question, however, it is difficult to find high-school-aged LGBT students to recruit, said Schoenberg.

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Comments

Kish N. Tuches (not verified)
Wed, 12/31/1969 - 8:00pm

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Oh, now I get it. The ideal candidate for admission would be a female, part Native-American, part Negress, who was once a guy with a learning disability. Woe to the poor schmuck with perfect SATs, extra-curricular activities and community involvement, who is not sufficiently respectful of LGBT.

Ed (not verified)
Wed, 12/31/1969 - 8:00pm

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Malcom Muggeridge once said, "Western man has educated himself into imbecility." The homosexual activists have duped America's educated elite into carrying their luggage.

X. Plore Uranus (not verified)
Wed, 12/31/1969 - 8:00pm

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Ed is 100% correct. Remember a few short years ago, Bob Jones University was being vilified for discriminatory practices. What's the difference?

This is ridiculous (not verified)
Wed, 12/31/1969 - 8:00pm

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Without such a question, however, it is difficult to find high-school-aged LGBT students to recruit, said Schoenberg. And I thought the gays were trying to knock off this image... But all kidding aside, this is ridiculous. Why should our University care what a person's sexual orientation is? What matters is their intellect, not who they like to get down with. We are a University of learning and academic achievement last time I checked. Recruiting someone specifically because they are gay is just as discriminatory as recruiting someone because they're straight, white, black, asian, latino, tall, short, etc. While it's a good thing to advertise that we are an accepting campus (or is it?), it's another animal to specifically recruit these kids because of their sexual orientation...


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