<p>*In my experience, everyone has stayed within their own little groups. I rarely ever see anyone who’s white, black, Hispanic, Asian, etc, etc, walking together. *</p>
<p>Actually, that is quite common EVERYWHERE. I’m from Calif, and the students there often hang out with their own ethnic groups. My older son is at a Top 20 school and all the Asian kids hang together, the Muslim kids hang together, etc. It’s a national concern that ethnic groups tend to socialize in groups. There’s even a book about it…
[Amazon.com:</a> “Why Are All The Black Kids Sitting Together in the Cafeteria?”: A Psychologist Explains the Development of Racial Identity (9780465083619): Beverly Daniel Tatum: Books](<a href=“http://www.amazon.com/Black-Kids-Sitting-Together-Cafeteria/dp/0465083617]Amazon.com:”>http://www.amazon.com/Black-Kids-Sitting-Together-Cafeteria/dp/0465083617)</p>
<p>This book isn’t talking about southern schools…it is talking about schools all over the US.
Amazon review: Anyone who’s been to a high school or college has noted how students of the same race seem to stick together. Author Beverly Daniel Tatum has noticed it too…</p>
<p>I have one son at Bama and one that has graduated from there. Bama is not as you’ve described from a high schooler’s perspective. Oh, and as for Tom’s shoes…they’re a national phenomenon with college kids…not just at Bama.</p>