<p>UCF and UF are really not that diverse; just from my seeing a lot of students from both schools and going to orientation at one they seem just averagely diverse but with a much heavier hispanic population but that is because it is Florida. The data from UCF says that 60% of their students are white and that the only large deviation from US population is in Hispanic students which jumps to 20% and UF is very similar with 60%white and high levels of hispanics but also a slightly higher level of Asians. So basically just walking around the campus of either school gives you a pretty clear picture of how diverse they are. I just don’t think that a jump in one race is really tantamount to being the most diverse schools in the country.There doesn’t appear to be any segregation factor in them either. Most of these organization members are very eager to have anybody come out and rush and very supportive of people who do attempt it no matter what race they are.</p>
<p>As for the question, they are rejected for the same reason as why schools usually don’t accept 50% white and 50% minorities. Other organizations follow the same path. If you have more of one race than another then that race just statistically makes it more likely that a higher number of people from that race will get accepted. The numbers fluctuate slightly from year to year but they reasonably follow a pretty stable trend.</p>
<p>To illustrate, you have 5 people competing in any sort of challenge. One is a minority and the other four are white. You would bet on a white person winning because there are more combinations that result in a white person winning, whereas if you bet on a black person there would only be much fewer situations where that would occur.</p>