Surveys

Race and Ethnicity Survey

BACKGROUND INFORMATION ON THE NEW RACE/ETHNICITY CODES

Old Race and Ethnicity Standards
New Race and Ethnicity Standards
Reason for Changing the Standards
Guidance for New Race and Ethnicity Standards
Comparison of Old Reporting Standards to New Reporting Standards

Thank you for your interest in the University of Florida’s Race and Ethnicity Codes Transition process. Changes mandated by the U.S. Department of Education will impact the collection, reporting and use of race/ethnicity data across campus. The intent of the changes is to provide a wider range of options for self-identification. These changes will affect the university in a variety of ways, including how we record, store and report data on everything from employee records to law enforcement statistics.

Given the widespread use of race/ethnicity data on campus, a transition team formed to plan for the data collection and reporting challenges that the process would entail. The team’s final report, which includes more detailed information about the changes and the technical elements of UF’s response, is available here: Race and Ethnicity Code Transition Team Report and Recommendations

As part of the process, students, faculty, and staff are being asked to self-identify using the new two-question format.

Faculty and staff may self-identify by going to my.ufl.edu after October 2, 2009 and navigating to MyUFL > My Self Service > UF Ethnicity & Race Survey.

Students are asked to participate by going to ONE.UF at one.uf.edu/soc after October 15, 2009 and following the resurvey link.

Old Race and Ethnicity Standards

In 1977, the White House’s Office of Management and Budget (OMB) issued Statistical Policy Directive Number 15, “Race and Ethnic Standards for Federal Statistics and Administrative Reporting.” In these standards, four racial categories were established:

  1. American Indian or Alaskan Native,
  2. Asian or Pacific Islander,
  3. Black, and
  4. White.

Additionally, two ethnicity categories were established:

  1. Hispanic Origin and
  2. Not of Hispanic Origin.

For purposes of educational institutions’ federal reporting, ethnicity and race were combined into a single question, so that people chose either to report their Hispanic ethnicity, or to report a race, but could not report both or select multiple races.

New Race and Ethnicity Standards

In 1997, the OMB issued Revisions to the Standards for the Classification of Federal Data on Race and Ethnicity. In these new standards, two modifications included:

  1. the Asian or Pacific Islander category was separated into two categories — “Asian” and ” Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander,” and
  2. the term “Hispanic” was changed to “Hispanic or Latino” (the term “Spanish Origin” may also be used in addition to Hispanic or Latino).

There are now five categories for data on race:

  1. American Indian or Alaska Native
  2. Asian
  3. Black or African American
  4. Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
  5. White

Instead of allowing a multiracial category, the OMB adopted a standard of allowing respondents to select one or more races when they self-identify.

There are now two categories for data on ethnicity:

  1. Hispanic or Latino or Spanish Origin
  2. Not Hispanic or Latino or Spanish Origin

Additionally, the new standards call for separate questions to be used, wherever feasible, for reporting race and ethnicity.

Reason for Changing the Standards

Responding to growing criticism that the 1977 racial and ethnic standards did not reflect the diversity of the nation’s current population, the OMB initiated a comprehensive review in 1993. The review included:

  1. Organizing a workshop to address the issues by the National Academy of Sciences,
  2. Convening four public hearings, and
  3. Appointing an Interagency Committee for the Review of Racial and Ethnic Standards, which later developed a research agenda and conducted several research studies.

The result of the Committee’s efforts was a report describing recommended changes with most of those recommendations being accepted by the OMB in its 1997 Standards. These recommendations led to the guidance and new standards.

Guidance for New Race and Ethnicity Standards

On October 19, 2007, the U.S. Department of Education posted to the Federal Register the “Final Guidance on Maintaining, Collecting, and Reporting Racial and Ethnic Data to the U.S. Department of Education” to implement OMB’s 1997 Standards. The guidance issued by the Department covers two issues: 1) the collection of race and ethnicity data by institutions, and 2) the reporting of aggregate data to the Department.

For collecting race and ethnicity data, postsecondary institutions must use a two-question format as follows:

  1. The first question is whether the respondent is “Hispanic or Latino or Spanish Origin” or “Not Hispanic or Latino or Spanish Origin.” (The term “Hispanic or Latino or Spanish Origin ” is defined as a person of Cuban, Mexican, Puerto Rican, South or Central American, or other Spanish culture or origin, regardless of race.)
  2. The second question is whether the respondent is from one or more races from the following list: American Indian or Alaska Native, Asian, Black or African American, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander, White. Postsecondary institutions cannot use a multi-race category in collecting data from respondents.

As a result, there are 64 possible combinations of responses (including non-response to either question), up to and including the selection of all five race items.

Comparison of Old Reporting Standards to New Reporting Standards

For reporting aggregate data to the U.S. Department of Education, the guidance requires that individual selections be consolidated into nine categories. The current and new race/ethnicity categories for reporting data are outlined below.

Current Reporting Categories (5+2 format)New Reporting Categories (7+2 format)
Five race/ethnicity categories Seven race/ethnicity categories
HispanicHispanic or Latino or Spanish Origin of any race
American Indian or Alaskan NativeAmerican Indian or Alaskan Native
Asian or Pacific IslanderAsian
 Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
Black, non-HispanicBlack or African American
White, non-HispanicWhite
 Two or more races
Two additional categories
Non-Resident AlienNon-Resident Alien (of any race or ethnicity)
Race and Ethnicity unknownRace and Ethnicity unknown

Everyone who selects “Hispanic” will be reported in that grouping, regardless of the race selections made. A “two or more races” category replaces the reporting of dozens of possible multiple selections. While this is much simpler than the 64 combinations possible, institutions are encouraged to keep all the detail of individual responses and to design internal reports as appropriate. The University of Florida does plan to provide more detailed reports than the federal government requires, once the process of resurveying employees and students is complete.

Next annual update scheduled for November/December, 2017