HBCUs are struggling to survive

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http://www.thecharlottepost.com/news/2014/07/25/state-national/hbcus-struggle-to-survive/

HBCUs struggle to survive
Finances and enrollment key to staying open
Published Friday, July 25, 2014 12:27 pm
by Jerome Bailey Jr., The Associated Press

Three days before Payton Wilkins returned home to Detroit last May with a bachelor's degree, his cousin was arrested for selling heroin and crack cocaine.


“Before I came to college I was hanging out with him so it's a really good chance I would be in prison right now,'' said Wilkins, 24, the first person in his family to graduate from college. He had no college plans until his mom made him apply to Dillard University, a private historically black school in New Orleans.


For generations, such colleges and universities have played a key role in educating young African-Americans like Wilkins.


But facing often-steep declines in enrollment, these schools are struggling to survive. In the last 20 years, five historically black colleges and universities – or HBCUs – have shut down and about a dozen have dealt with accreditation issues.


South Carolina State University, that state's only public historically black higher education institution, had its accreditation placed on probation last month after the school was cited for financial problems.


Morris Brown College, a 133-year-old private institution in Atlanta, filed for bankruptcy in August 2012 and has received court approval to sell some of its property.


Last year, North Carolina elected officials flirted with the idea of merging Elizabeth City State University, a public historically black college, with another institution after its enrollment had dropped by 900 students in three years.


An outcry from supporters saved the school and stirred up support from the state's Legislative Black Caucus last month.


Historically black colleges once were the only option for most black students, who made up almost 100 percent of their enrollment in 1950. That began to change in the 1960s, as many doors that once were shut to blacks were opened.


Now that black students have a much wider choice of schools, only 11 percent of African-American college students choose a historically black college or university.


Abdul S. Rasheed, a member of Elizabeth City State's board of trustees, said that in order for historically black schools to survive, their graduates and supporters must take control of their own future.


While financial contributions to U.S. colleges rose slightly in 2013, on average at historically black colleges, only 10 percent of alumni give back.


“If nothing changes, they will eliminate them,'' says Rasheed. “That will be the biggest mistake this country has ever made.''


Marybeth Gasman, an expert on historically black colleges and professor at the University of Pennsylvania, said states should support black colleges because they are doing the ``lion's share'' of the work for first generation-students like Wilkins.


“Historically black colleges serve low-income students, first-generation students, students of color, adult learners, part-time students, students who might be what I call ‘swirlers' who swirl in and swirl out of academe,'' says Gasman.


Eighty-four percent of students at historically black schools receive Pell Grants, which are federal, need-based funds awarded to low-income students.


Wilkins says the question of relevancy for HBCUs is itself irrelevant.


“Coming to Dillard, I really wasn't prepared academically. Dillard brought out of me this urge to want to learn,'' says Wilkins. He graduated with a political science degree and plans to go to law school.


As society changes, many historically black colleges and universities are not all black anymore. One of every four students at a historically black institution is Hispanic, Asian-American, white or of another ethnicity.


Zane Lewis, a white freshman from Sanford, North Carolina, plans to major in business or marketing at North Carolina Central University, a historically black school in Durham.


“I thought I wasn't really going to fit in but, I mean, everyone has been really friendly so far,'' says Lewis. "I just want to walk away saying that they didn't treat me different.''


Gasman says states are reluctant to support historically black colleges because they consider them segregated – although largely white universities can be less integrated than the historically black schools.


“We are no more separate than Chapel Hill is,'' says Rasheed, referring to the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where the student body was 66 percent white last fall, according to data from the college portrait of undergraduate education website.


“If they close down Elizabeth City State, are they going to allow 2,000 more African-Americans and others to be admitted at other campuses?'' he asked.
 

Clark Wayne

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Not reading all of this but it all boils down to white employers not liking hbcu's and black people see this and they don't want to waste money at a school that's not gonna get them ahead. It's ashame. That employers do this.
I get what you're saying but it's more to it than that. Some of these HBCU's are ran pretty horribly.
 

Bunchy Carter

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Not reading all of this but it all boils down to white employers not liking hbcu's and black people see this and they don't want to waste money at a school that's not gonna get them ahead. It's ashame. That employers do this.

Bullshyt, I went to an HBCU and I am pretty successful. It's how you apply yourself, there are people that graduated from MIT, CAL TECH, PENN; top notch school, who are unemployed. The enrollment has dropped down since the integration; if you took time to read the article "Historically black colleges once were the only option for most black students, who made up almost 100 percent of their enrollment in 1950. That began to change in the 1960s, as many doors that once were shut to blacks were opened." Brown v. Board of Education, 347 U.S. 483 was implemented in 1954, and that is why HBCU went down; because blacks said to themselves these negro schools aint shyt, we need the white man's (acceptance) books to be smart.

Also with that integration brought excellent athletes, which brings forth money to the white schools. David "Deacon" Jones Mississippi Valley State University, Jerry Rice Mississippi Valley State University, Shannon Sharpe Savannah State University, Walter Payton Jackson State, Doug Williams Grambling State, Steve McNair Alcorn State University , Donald Driver Alcorn State University & etc. All went to HBCU and the white schools knew they needed those bodies (slavery) to make entertainment for their school.

A lot of excellent black players in the south had to go to HBCU because the white institutions did not allow them. The only schools which alowed blacks were up North and the West.

It was not until 1970 when USC beat the shyt out of . Alabama with Sam "Bam" Cunningham, Southen Colleges integrated and that was the start of the downfall of HBCU.



:blessed:

I get what you're saying but it's more to it than that. Some of these HBCU's are ran pretty horribly.

I can agree with that
 
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AAKing23

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There's a couple of hbcu's I'd go to but the shyt is too expensive, might as well go to a large state school :manny:
 
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