 Media Credit: photo illustration by Lindsay Bryant
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The sidewalks are littered with them - so many faces.
You might be able to pick them out - by the colors of their skins, the colors of their hair, the colors of their eyes - and, judging by appearance, place them into one ethnic group or another.
But then there is Lina Jenssen, 24, an exchange student from Germany. Her father is German, but her mother is Filipino.
Jenssen said she used to feel more connected to her German culture since her life was there, but then she studied last semester in the Philippines, her mother's home country, and developed a strong fondness for that heritage, too. Where does she fit in? What does she claim?
"I don't know, I am divided," she said.
Now, the U.S. Department of Education is changing the way it collects and reports racial and ethnic data - which means that most multi-racial students, like Jenssen, will be able to check more than one box on the list.
Beginning in the 2010-11 school year, non-Hispanic students in the U.S. will have the ability to check all races that apply - something the current system doesn't require. Right now, schools are required to report only one ethnicity per student, out of seven major ethnicities, according to the U.S. Department of Education.
At SJSU, students are asked if they claim a secondary ethnicity, but responses to the question are not tracked for any university or government purposes, according to the Office of Institutional Research. In the semesters since Fall 2002, a total of 73 students have chosen a secondary ethnicity.
Jenssen, a graduate student in mass communications, however, said she couldn't recall a time when she had to choose between her two ethnicities.
"I am proud of both nationalities, and I would always stand up to both of them." If push came to shove, she said she would choose her country of citizenship, Germany.
But not everyone is so attached to their ethnicity.
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