Then she states out loud verbatim in front of the entire class, "all of you have been suspected of suspicious activity in the past"
if this is the basis for concern or a possible action, OP needs to give it up now. Even if this specific prof was the only person to ever suspect members of the group of suspicious activity and had never verbalized it to another person, it is still a true statement.
I have never sat next to either of the people around my for any previous exam,
I don't see why that is relevant
, nor has any individual ever been accused or confronted of cheating or anything of the sort in the past.
So? nor were they accused of such this time either but beyond that, unless the OP is all knowing, OP and associates could have been accused of cheating or anything else and never be aware of the conversation where it was addressed.
. I sat alongside my friend whom is the same ethnicity as me. In my particular row, a group up us of ethnic background were sitting together (about 10-12 of mixed ethnic races), the majority being my ethnicity.
would that not shoot down the claim of discrimination based on race? If there was 10-12 people of mixed ethnic background, what race was being discriminated against? How would you know?
but then you have this:
Amongst this group, 2 or 3 were of a different ethnicity and asked to move because they were seated amongst my row of 10-12 students who was told to get up.
(same row but yet now, instead of "mixed ethnic races", suddenly we have 7-10 of the same race and 2-3 of a different race but beyond that, if is was racially motivated, why were the 2-3 students of a race other than the OP also required to move? That would dilute the claim of racial discrimination.
She was also quoted as saying, "time to break up the pods" during her course of action
while OP seems to be offended, I can see nothing offensive about the statement.
One thing the OP has not stated is; were the groups that were required to move all in the profs class? Were there other large groups consisting of members of this profs class of other races that were not required to relocate?
While the OP paints this as discriminatory, it could be as simple as the students sat in groups where there were many from this profs class setting together and apparently at least some of them have displayed some sort of suspicious activity so the prof felt the need to separate the "pods" to prevent any possibility of cheating.
by chance, is there a higher percentage of "us" in the profs class than "them"? Is there a higher percentage of "us" in the profs class than in the other classes that were also using this same room for test purposes? If either of those are true, it is likely that you would have a "pod" of "us" that just happened to be from the same class setting together. As such, it would have been completely appropriate for the prof to break up the groups.
It's amazing how selective reporting of facts can alter the perception of those reading the story. Not saying there wasn't some inappropriate actions but a review of the full set of facts could show a very different situation.