oldest HBCU is in trouble

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ARTICLE mentions Cheyney U. struggles but is about a MAN lifting another HBCU out of ruin...and his advice to CU.



How one historically black college changed its fortune

How one historically black college changed its fortune
Updated: November 15, 2017 — 5:34 PM EST


View Gallery Ben Torres
Michael Sorrell, president of Paul Quinn College, says hello to student Latavean Knight during a school event, Sorrell helped to transform the once troubled historically black university.
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by Susan Snyder & Nancy Phillips - Staff Writers
Michael Sorrell has a message for Cheyney University as it struggles to find its way past myriad academic and financial failings after years of mismanagement.


“When you’re down, it can be quite liberating,” he said. “You are unencumbered by a history of success. It just opened the door for us to be incredibly innovative.”

Sorrell’s advice comes from hard-earned experience.

When Sorrell became president of Paul Quinn College, an historically black school in Dallas, in 2007, it had about 30 days of cash on hand, faced loss of accreditation and saw virtually none of its students graduate in four years.

“We had just received an evaluation by the Boston Consulting Group that determined the school was a year to 18 months from having to close,” Sorrell said. “The problems were legion. We had financial issues. We had low morale. We had a deteriorating physical infrastructure.”

More than a decade later, the college’s fortune has changed dramatically, as have its practices, and Sorrell — a lawyer and public affairs expert who said he found his true calling as a college president — has become nationally known for its turnaround.


Sorrell encouraged those trying to save Cheyney to aim for greatness, not mere survival.

“Don’t remake Cheyney with a vision of mediocrity,” he warned. “Remake Cheyney with a vision of excellence.”

His advice comes as the 180-year-old university — the nation’s oldest historically black college — awaits a possible decision Thursday from the Middle States Commission on Higher Education on whether it can keep its accreditation. Losing it would mean the school almost certainly would have to close.

Cheyney has been buffeted by soaring debt, unstable leadership and falling enrollment for decades, and in recent years, an Inquirer/Daily News investigation has shown, the school’s troubles have been deepened by gross mismanagement and lax oversight by those responsible for its operations.

Sorrell’s approach to improving Paul Quinn was multi-faceted.

He converted the school into a “work college,” one of only eight in the United States. Every student works on or off-campus jobs for 10 to 15 hours a week to help pay tuition. That was a key move for a college at which 90 percent of students come from low-income families, a population similar to Cheyney’s.


To set a professional tone, Sorrell instituted a “business casual” dress code during the day for most of the school week.

He also took the controversial step of eliminating the school’s costly football program and converted the football field into an organic farm worked by students, who sell and donate food to the surrounding community. One of the college’s biggest customers is the Dallas Cowboys, which sells the food at concession stands.

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Ben Torres
Michael Sorrell, president of Paul Quinn College, at the organic farm on the campus of Paul Quinn College in Dallas, The farm used to be the school’s football field. Ben Torres for The Philadelphia Inquirer
Sorrell also raised admission standards, slashed tuition, traveled the country building recruiting relationships with high schools and gathering donations. And he launched $9 million in campus improvements and started a summer program to help students adjust to college. To help achieve fiscal solvency, he reduced salaries, including his own, by 25 percent.

Paul Quinn no longer faces accreditation threat. For eight of the past 10 years, it has run six- or seven-figure surpluses. There’s been a waiting list of applicants the last three years. The six-year graduation rate has risen from single digits to 19 percent, Sorrell said.

“It had a pretty amazing turn around,” said Marybeth Gasman, a University of Pennsylvania professor who studies historically black universities.


Gasman believes Cheyney should survive, too.

“I do think it needs to be changed fundamentally in terms of its approach,” she said.

Cheyney, Gasman said, should hire an “energetic” president with a business plan in mind and a willingness to make hard decisions, jettison what’s not working and focus on its academic strengths.

Cheyney already has an academic base to build on, with its successful Keystone Honors Academy. The academy, with 114 students — about 15 percent of Cheyney’s enrollment — boasts a graduation rate of 72 percent and a freshman retention rate of 95 percent, said academy director Nicole G. Rayfield. That’s exponentially better than Cheyney’s overall numbers.

If Cheyney improves its dysfunctional admissions office, the academy may land more strong students. Two years ago, Cheyney failed to send acceptance letters to promising Keystone candidates before the May 1 deadline. Many likely went to other schools.

At Paul Quinn, Sorrell cut tuition from about $23,850 to $14,495 to ensure more students could afford to attend. The pricing and work program are designed to help students graduate with less than $10,000 in debt.


The college had been experiencing enrollment decline for more than a decade before he took over. Enrollment fell even further during his first two years, from 550 to just 151, as students who couldn’t pay their bills, meet academic standards or feared the school would lose its accreditation left. Enrollment has returned to 519.

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Ben Torres
Michael Sorrell, president of Paul Quinn College, meets with students including senior Ryan Abrams, 22, right, while organizing a speaking event at Paul Quinn College. Ben Torres for The Philadelphia Inquirer
A native of Chicago, Sorrell doesn’t have the background of a typical college president. He started in economic development in North Carolina. Then, after getting his law degree, he worked at various firms in Dallas. Then he moved to the White House, serving as a special assistant in the executive office under President Clinton. After that, he worked in public affairs, starting his own firm, representing NBA players and college basketball coaches.

Sorrell got his bachelor’s degree from Oberlin, law and master’s degrees from Duke and his doctorate from the University of Pennsylvania.

Some of his methods weren’t popular. When he got push back on ending football, he challenged critics to raise a $2 million endowment to pay for it; they didn’t.

“You need to make a commitment that you’re going to do what’s right for the student,” Sorrell said. “What’s right for the student may not be what’s right for the alumni. It may not even be what’s right for the traditional stakeholders,” including faculty and staff.


Sorrell advises Cheyney to “stop talking about survival. That language doesn’t inspire anyone. People need inspiration, so you need to have a vision that is inspiring.

“I know it’s a dark day for Cheyney, but it is not a situation without hope.”
Published: November 15, 2017 — 3:01 AM EST | Updated: November 15, 2017 — 5:34 PM EST
 

kayslay

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I wish to attend an HBCU for my masters.
I hope we can hold on to our institutions.
 
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Cheyney granted a reprieve

Cheyney University is safe.

The Middle States Commission on Higher Education (MSCHE) granted the nation's oldest Black college a reprieve on Friday. The school, located in Delaware County, about 45 minutes outside of Philadelphia, will face a one-year extension for demonstrating compliance.

The commission released a public disclosure statement explaining the accreditation status and compliance extension saying "because the institution has demonstrated significant progress towards the resolution of its non-compliance issues, is making a good faith effort to remedy existing deficiencies, and a reasonable expectation exists that such deficiencies will be remedied within the period of the extension."


The school was initially accredited by the MSCHE back in 1951 and was last affirmed accreditation in 2014. The college was put on probation in 2015 by the commission because of a lack of evidence that the school was in compliance with school resources and some issues with leadership and governance.

"We're pleased that the Middle States Commission recognized the effort that was put forth by Cheyney university staff, faculty, employees, etc. and the external public that assisted us in this process to arrive at this outcome," said Cheyney University President Aaron Walton.

"There's much work to be done, but we know the path to success," he added. "This gives us the opportunity to continue to demonstrate the positive direction that Cheyney University is going in. That activity will be reflected in the updated plan that is due to middle states by September 1, 2018."

Up until Walton, the college had been without a permanent leader since 2014 when former President Michelle R. Howard-Vital retired.

“As the oldest HBCU in the country, Cheyney is an institution with a record of making significant contributions to our commonwealth," said Gov. Tom Wolf in a statement on Friday. "Since taking office, I worked closely with the state system and its board, specifically Chairwoman Shapira, to create a path forward for Cheyney that allows it to build off of its history, continue as a degree granting institution, and address its financial challenges."

In addition to concerns regarding leadership, other problems have mounted for the institution. Enrollment dropped around 700 and the college continued to spend more than its revenue.

Additionally, MSCHE's concerns grew in 2016, when it added planning, resource allocation and institutional renewal, administration and requirement of financial responsibility.

The Board of Governors of Pennsylvania’s State System of Higher Education recently named Walton president of Cheyney for a term beginning immediately through June 30, 2021, to ensure stable leadership while the university implements a multi-year financial plan.

Walton had served as Cheyney’s interim president since May, shortly after MSCHE ordered Cheyney to “show cause” as to why its accreditation should not be withdrawn.


Since then, the university has made significant strides, including submitting a detailed operating plan to Middle States that explains, among other things, how it will balance its budget in the future while meeting the educational needs of students.

Last week, the Council of Trustees recommended Walton be named the university’s next president and in accordance with state law, the council conferred with students, faculty and alumni prior to voting on the recommendation.

“When we considered who would be best to ensure the university’s future, it was clear that Aaron Walton is that person,” said Robert W. Bogle, chair of Cheyney University’s Council of Trustees. “I applaud what he has accomplished in just six months, and I can only imagine what he will do with more time.”

Bogle is also the president and CEO of The Philadelphia Tribune.

"Today’s decision is a testament to the work of President Walton, Chairman Bogle, acting Chancellor Whitney and all of those who helped Cheyney begin the process of rebuilding," Wolf said. "There is still work to do but I am confident that we can continue to make progress.”

Aaron Walton, Cheyney University President : "There's much work to be done, but we know the path to success. This gives us the opportunity to continue to demonstrate the positive direction that Cheyney University is going in."

— Phillip Jackson (@phillej_) November 17, 2017
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I wish to attend an HBCU for my masters.
I hope we can hold on to our institutions.

Is there a particular HBCU with a strong reputation for your masters concentration or do you just want to experience HBCU life?

I ask because normally people go hbcu for undegrad and then to a white mainstream institution.

I think the smaller HBCUs are going to have to consolidate in the future to survive.
 
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