<p>Amherst and Williams don’t have graduate students in the sciences, a fact you cannot ignore when making that comparison.</p>
<p>Speaking of diversity, Wesleyan is now the least racially diverse of the Little Three, and I’m guessing the socioeconomic gap might be even larger.</p>
<p>Wesleyan:
31% students of color in Classes 2014–2017 (7% Black or African American; 8% Asian or Asian American; 10% Latino or Hispanic; .07% Native American, .1% Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander; 6% two or more races); 8% international students</p>
<p>Amherst:
0.1% American Indian/Alaskan Native
13.9% Asian
12.9% Black/African-American
14.2% Hispanic/Latino
6.2% Multi-race (not Hispanic/Latino)
0.0% Native Hawaiian/ Pacific Islander
46.2% White
6.6% Unknown</p>
<p>Williams:
Asian/Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander
11.0%
Black or African American
8.0%
Hispanic/Latino
11.0%
White
58.0%
Two or More Races
5.0%
Non-Resident Alien
7.0%</p>