Stereotypes tend to be nasty conjectures, and Princeton has plenty of them. But recently released survey results from the USG seem to indicate that many campus stereotypes are more or less true. The COMBO II survey was administered in spring 2009 (the first COMBO was administered in 2007), an anonymous survey that looks at the effects and relationship of family income, high school type, eating club membership, ethnicity, happiness, and academic major choices.
A lot of the findings (analyzed by ORF 245 and James Coan ‘09) are quite interesting and even troubling. For the most part, they just confirm everything we’ve always suspected. A summary of the survey findings (with graphs!):
- Income and ethnicity strongly impact which dining option students choose
- Wealthier students and white students are more likely to join an eating club
- White students tend to be from wealthier families than non-white students

