Iowa State ranked one of "30 Best Colleges for LGBT Students"

Iowa State University was the only Iowa school included on a new list of “30 Best Colleges for LGBT Students,” compiled by the Best Colleges site. The 30 schools were “not ranked in any particular order” but all met the following criteria:

* 4 or 5 Star Rating on the Campus Pride Index: This comprehensive college catalog rates schools based on a rubric of eight LGBT-inclusive factors. Since a three star ranking represents average performance, each of the schools included on our list are known for an above-average rating.

*Greek social organizations with one or both of these organizations in a chapter:

* Gamma Rho Lambda (GRL): This sorority was founded in 2003 and is open to members that identify across a wide range of gender and sexuality spectrums.

* Delta Lambda Phi (DLP): This fraternity is dedicated to creating friendly social spaces for gay and bisexual men to connect through campus activities.

It’s worth noting that ISU currently has 4 stars on the Campus Pride Index. Two Iowa higher education institutions do better with a 4.5 star rating: the University of Iowa and Wartburg College. I assume those schools were not included on the Best Colleges list because they lack LGBT-friendly Greek affiliates. Since a lot of college students (straight or gay) have no interest in joining a fraternity or sorority, the Campus Pride Index strikes me as a better overall measure of inclusion. Wartburg leaders have made impressive efforts to create not just a tolerant, but a welcoming atmosphere.

The University of Northern Iowa matched Iowa State with 4 stars on the Campus Pride Index. To my surprise, Grinnell College, considered one of the most progressive islands in Iowa, scored just 3.5 stars. Luther College got 3 stars, Buena Vista University 2.5 stars, and Drake University and Marshalltown Community College got 2 stars each.

No Iowa schools made it onto the Campus Pride list of top 50 LGBT-friendly colleges, which came out in August. To be eligible for that list, schools needed to score 5 stars on the Campus Pride Index and “have the highest percentages across the eight LGBT-friendly benchmarks for policy, program and practice.”

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desmoinesdem

  • Thoughts

    * 22 years ago I had former fraternity brothers screaming at the GLB students Campanilling at Iowa State. (One of several reasons ‘former’ is that statement) Today, that same institution employs several dozen out staff and faculty – many them are the same kids whom were campanilling back then.

    * Anyone who actually knows Drake University’s current culture wouldn’t be at all surprised by that Pride index rating. There’s a surprisingly rabid evangelical undercurrent in the undergraduate body, and the Law School is deeply conservative. I grew up as a Waveland neighborhood townie, and I had no idea that the Drunk students (sic) were ever that spiritual. Town & gown events, lectures, faculty & staff families as neighbors – I never had contact with a Drake student in a religious setting, and I grew up religious.

    ISU also has that same evangelical undercurrent, but I don’t see it as aggressively. Could be a factor of wealth, could be from where I observed their cultures – at one I’m staff, and the other I was a chaplain’s spouse.

    • Drake has always had

      a relatively conservative student body, as long as I can remember. Maybe not religious, but not socially liberal.

      A female friend of mine who kept her hair short was walking down the street in Iowa City holding hands with her boyfriend sometime in the late 1980s, and had some frat boy passing by yell, “Homos!” A lot has changed everywhere.  

      • Conservative v. Evangelical

        It’s mirroring that societal shift – Drake’s student base since the 60’s (at least) has been rooted in upper and upper-middle class whites, mainly from Illinois. (People laugh at me about linking the Cubs and Drake, but it’s not rocket science. I always kept expecting John Hughes to drop Drake or Iowa lines, but his enclave didn’t have those ties) Used to be that population went to church, acted as trustees, but that was about the end of it. As charismatic evangelism has pushed itself into and subsuming mainline Protestantism, conservative families (or their children) have absorbed that religious focus.  

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