Study: HCBU graduates financially and socially happier than PWI graduates

godkiller

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HBCU graduates are more likely to say that their colleges prepared them for life after than black graduates of non-HBCUs.

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For years, people have questioned the relevancy of historically black colleges and universities, especially with many of these institutions facing fiscal issues, declining enrollment and cohort default rates. The latest Gallup-USA Funds Minority College Graduates Report, however, finds that HBCU graduates are more likely to prosper after graduation than students who graduate from non-HBCUs.
The study examined 520 black graduates of HBCUs and 1,758 black graduates of other colleges. Gallup looked at five elements of well-being including: purpose, social, financial, community and physical. Then asked graduates about their satisfaction with their college experience and current engagement at work. The results, 55 percent of black HBCU graduates said they felt prepared for life after graduation, while only 29 percent of black graduates from other institutions said they felt prepared.

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Gallup found that HBCU graduates are also most likely to have strong relationships, enjoy what they do each day for work, and they are more goal-oriented. However, the biggest gap in well-being among black graduates is in the financial breakdown. The report found that four in 10 black HBCU graduates are more likely to thrive financially while fewer than three in 10 black graduates of other schools can say the same.
“I think this is positive news in the grand scheme of things that we’ve heard recently because there’s still criticism about graduation rates and cohort default rates, but I think this is a whole new set of data that says a lot about the very, very beneficial experiences that are happening for students who attend HBCUs,” Brandon Busteed, executive director of education and workforce development at Gallup, told The Huffington Post.


The study also found that HBCU graduates had stronger emotional and experiential support from mentors, professors and long-term projects they were assigned. Furthermore, these graduates are more likely to strongly agree that their colleges prepared them for post-graduation life than other graduates.
“Not only were black graduates from HBCUs much more likely to say they had a mentor who encouraged their goals and dreams and had a professor who cared about them as a person; they were also more likely to say they had a job or an internship where they applied what they were learning,” Busteed said. “So it’s both the emotional experiences and these experiential things that are connected to work preparation that are separating them according to their graduates.”





Despite the struggles HBCUs face, its overall success at allowing its students a better college experience by offering more emotional and experiential opportunitiesthan at non-HBCUs could be modeled at other universities.
 

godkiller

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I read another study saying that HBCU graduates are more successful too. Studying biology, chemistry, finance, etc is markedly less tedious and even enjoyable when one can see other black people doing it around him. The feelings of lonliness and dejection which can creep on black people in isolated PWI settings are mitigated and eliminated when there are more blacks around. One feels as though they are doing what everybody else black is doing: studying.
 
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Mr Rager

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I read another study saying that HBCU graduates are more successful too. Studying biology, chemistry, finance, etc is way easier when you can see other black people doing it around you. Makes you feel less lonely.

And what about when you get into the real world, where you don't have the security and comfort of being around people the same color as you:jbhmm:
 

godkiller

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Grambling State University Alumni Checking In :blessed:



HBCU experiences and results prove that a more moneyed institution doesn't mean a better, more fruitful or more successful education. It's all what you do with your time in college, whom you do it with and whether you are willing to study. I suspect HBCUs encourage black students to study more because there are more like-minded academic blacks students there who black nerds and academic-minded people can engage and study with.
 

godkiller

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And what about when you get into the real world, where you don't have the security and comfort of being around people the same color as you:jbhmm:

You'll have studied well enough from the HBCU experience and be mature enough to work along with them same as anybody else. There's no evidence HBCU students have any problem working with other races. If that was a problem, HBCU students wouldn't report more income, more financial happiness and more social happiness than PWI students.
 
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