ST. PETER, MINN.
The growing diversity of Minnesota's colleges can be measured in numbers, figures and graphs. Abdul Suleyman hasn't seen the pie charts, but he has seen the cafeteria.
"When I was a freshman, there were only three or four black guys," said the 22-year-old senior at Gustavus Adolphus College. "People would have us confused. It went from that to now, there's maybe 15 of us."
At Augsburg College in Minneapolis, Tereza Ponce de Leon is part of the most diverse freshman class in history. The color palette on college campuses is changing.
Thanks in part to a big jump this fall, the number of students of color going to college is way up. From suburban community college campuses to small-town schools like Gustavus, the growth goes beyond statistics. These students are changing how professors teach and campuses feel.
"It's a fascinating moment," said Paul Pribbenow, president of Augsburg College and chair of the Minnesota Private College Council. "We're in constant conversation about what this means and what a gift this is."
College was "always a big dream" of Ponce de Leon's. A program for low-income students called Admission Possible helped her focus her ambitions. Pregnancy narrowed her college search, but it only heightened her commitment to going. "I had to think not only about myself, but what would be better for the future of my son."
This fall, students of color make up 43 percent of the first-year, daytime undergraduate class at Augsburg. In total, a full quarter of the college's undergraduates are students of color -- up from 8.6 percent in 2001.