MADISON, Wis. – The University of Wisconsin would like white students who participate in a community volunteer program to first come to terms with their “white privilege.”

And the university provided a workshop on the topic, specifically designed for white students, on Tuesday.

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It was called “The Privilege of Whiteness.” According to the university website, “Participants … will be able to describe privilege and marginalization. Participants will also reflect on and name the ways their privilege impacts their beliefs and behaviors by gaining the skills to identify the historical roots of White privilege and how it manifests today.

“The workshop is designed for a White audience. People of color are welcome.”

Students are not being forced to attend the workshop, but according to the website, it is full.

But the workshop is being sponsored by the university’s Morgridge Center for Public Service, which also operates a program called Badger Volunteers.

Badger Volunteers “is a semester-long program that pairs teams of students with community organizations (schools, nonprofits, municipalities) to volunteer 1-4 hours each week at the same organization. The program is designed to foster meaningful and consistent connections between community partners and students over the course of an entire semester.”

Students who want to participate in Badger Volunteers are required to attend the white privilege workshop, or one of a handful of other “education sessions” provided by the Morgridge Center, according to the Daily Caller.