The Least Celebrated, but Most Successful, Colleges for Graduating Low-Income Black Students

theworldismine13

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The Least Celebrated, but Most Successful, Colleges for Graduating Low-Income Black Students
http://www.theroot.com/articles/cul...for_graduating_low_income_black_students.html

Analyses that evaluate the success of HBCUs by observing their six-year graduation rates often miss the mark. On the surface, graduation rates tell us little about a college’s or university’s ability to educate a racially and economically diverse student body.
HBCUs have garnered well-deserved praise for successfully educating a cross section of black students; however, they are often chided for having low graduation rates. The average graduation rate for students across all HBCUs is 42 percent, slightly above the graduation rate for black students at all institutions, but less than half the rate of the predominately white institutions that have the highest graduation rates for black students.

Institutions like Spelman College, Howard University and Hampton University are often touted as model HBCUs because their graduation rates exceed 60 percent. However, each of these institutions also reject applicants at a higher rate; have tuition and fees that exceed $20,000, more than twice the HBCU average of $9,701; and have less than 50 percent of their freshman classes eligible for the federal Pell grant. Only students from families with economic need are eligible for the Pell grant; however, the colleges and universities that serve Pell-eligible students best are rarely portrayed as having model programs.

The top three universities for graduating black students within six years are Yale (98 percent), Harvard (97 percent) and Princeton (97 percent). There is no gap in graduation rates between black and white students on these campuses. However, we must consider other factors before lauding their success. The acceptance rates at these schools are between 6 and 7 percent; the total black population on campus is between 5 and 6 percent; the annual tuition and fees total between $42,000 and $44,000; and the percent of students they serve that are eligible for the federal Pell grant is between 13 and 14 percent.

Of 23 colleges and universities in the nation that have graduation rates for black students in the 90s, the average annual cost of tuition and fees is $43,700 and the average percent of the student body that is Pell eligible is 15 percent. By contrast only five HBCUs have an annual tuition that is greater than $20,000, and the average percent of the total HBCU enrollment that is Pell eligible is 72.8 percent.

Few colleges and universities educate a majority low-income student body and also graduate the majority of their black students, according to my most recent analysis of the Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System. In total, less than 1 percent of all universities and only 5 percent of all HBCUs fit the following criteria: are 4-year institutions, have a black student enrollment that is more than 249, serve more than 50 percent Pell-eligible students and have a graduation rate for black students that is 50 percent or greater.

This is the list of the 23 schools, of more than 2,100 evaluated, that fit my criteria. I call them the 50-50 club for serving more than 50 percent Pell-eligible students and graduating more than 50 percent of their black students:

Institution, State: (Black Undergraduate Population): Percent Black

* Talladega College, Ala.*: (867): 85 percent
* Agnes Scott College, Ga.: (309): 32 percent
* Apex School of Theology, N.C.: (609): 81 percent
* University of California-Riverside, Calif.: (1,170): 5 percent
* University of California-Santa Cruz, Calif.: (335): 2 percent
* William Carey University, Miss.: (1,025): 30 percent
* Adventist University of Health Sciences, Fla.: (530): 17 percent
* Georgia State University, Ga.: (11,343): 35 percent
* Shorter University-College of Adult & Professional Programs, Ga.: (1,077): 66 percent
* William Peace University, N.C.: (358): 36 percent
* Berea College, Ky.: (250): 14 percent
* Bethune-Cookman University, Fla.*: (3,071): 78 percent
* Morehouse College, Ga.*: (2,411): 96 percent
* University of California-Merced, Calif.: (372): 6 percent
* CUNY Hunter College, N.Y.: (2,273): 11 percent
* Johnson & Wales University-North Miami, Fla.: (531): 24 percent
* Fisk University, Tenn.*: (513): 84 percent
* CUNY Brooklyn College, N.Y.: (4,295): 25 percent
* Tougaloo College, Miss.*: (1,026): 97 percent
* Union Institute & University, Ohio: (399): 22 percent
* Everglades University, Fla.: (256): 16 percent
* Saint Peter’s University, N.J.: (612): 21 percent
* Bluefield College, Va.: (254): 23 percent

* after state name denotes an HBCU

No obvious thread links the institutions on the 50-50 list. Most are smaller, lesser known colleges and universities, which might have the advantage of educating low-income and black students in an intimate learning environment. Some of the colleges concentrate on a niche, which typically attract older and more-focused students. Other institutions on the list, such as Berea College, have a long-standing mission to provide educational opportunities to top-performing, low-income students. Among the institutions that educate students in a traditional learning environment, more than 25 percent of the list are HBCUs.

Georgia State University, which has a black enrollment of more than 11,000 students, is the largest state university on the 50-50 list. GSU’s success is not through happenstance, and entails two key strategies. First, they use predictive analytics to identify students who might be at risk of dropping out. The analytics use technology to create profiles of students based on more than 10 years of student data. Second, GSU uses targeted interventions, including micro grants and counseling, to address students’ needs based on the predictive analysis.

HBCUs have a clear role to play in creating models to graduate low-income black students. If one were to expand the 50-50 list to 50-40, which would include institutions with a greater than 40 percent graduation rate for black students, 14 additional HBCUs would make the list, including: Xavier University of Louisiana; Winston-Salem State University; Johnson C. Smith University; Dillard University; Bennett College; Philander Smith College; North Carolina A&T State University; Tuskegee University; Claflin University; Albany State University; Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University; Elizabeth City State University; Virginia State University; and North Carolina Central University. However, what is more impressive is that the collective average for Pell eligibility at these 14 HBCUs is 72.2 percent.

On Thursday, the president, vice president and first lady hosted the second College Opportunity Day of Action in Washington, D.C. The event focused on building networks of colleges around promoting completion and increasing the number of college graduates in STEM fields.

The event supported efforts to realize the president’s commitment to helping our nation lead the world in college attainment by 2020. However, status quo higher education in the United States has a very disappointing record of graduating low-income black students.

Without context, the high graduation rate for black students at more selective and more expensive PWIs and HBCUs can lead to erroneous and naive conclusions about what low-income black students need to graduate from college. The 50-50 club demonstrates low-income black students are graduating from some of our nation’s least celebrated institutions. Incorporating their models into best-practice strategies and policies will be key to erasing the college education gap, which has its roots in systemic economic inequality.
 

rapbeats

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Suhhh so.... basically its the same thing. Be Born Elite in a bad situation (diamond in the rough. but you're still a diamond). and end up being chosen for one of these Elite schools. you will probably graduate.

Dont be ELITE and go to any school accepting you and those kinds of schools will not graduate you.

Smart black people with a desire to graduate will graduate.

not so smart black people with a desire to graduate but not some insane work ethic. will probably not graduate.

Smart White people with a desire to graduate will graduate
not so smart white people with a desire to graduate bot not some insane work ethic. will probably graduate.
 

wheywhey

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The reason Howard and Spelman have a higher graduation rate is that they admit students who are qualified to attend college. Their students have higher SAT scores, higher high school GPAs, and more rigorous college prep courses. It is disingenuous for Dr. Toldson to encourage low-income and poorly prepared students to go to a college that will accept anyone breathing when their chances of graduating are below 50%. He doesn't even say what percentage of Pell grant recipients are graduating from the colleges he listed. For all we know a 50-50 college could graduating 15% Pell grant recipients.

If he is so concerned about cost why doesn't he mention the schools graduate the highest number of black students each year. They are both online: The University of Phoenix and Ashford University. Tuition is about $11,000 per year and they love students with Pell grant money. Just last month the Thurgood Marshall College Fund announced a deal with the University of Phoenix. UofP will be teaching public HBCU students.
https://www.insidehighered.com/news/2014/11/17/u-phoenix-and-hbcu-alliance-draws-skepticism

The top three universities for graduating black students within six years are Yale (98 percent), Harvard (97 percent) and Princeton (97 percent). There is no gap in graduation rates between black and white students on these campuses. However, we must consider other factors before lauding their success. The acceptance rates at these schools are between 6 and 7 percent; the total black population on campus is between 5 and 6 percent; the annual tuition and fees total between $42,000 and $44,000; and the percent of students they serve that are eligible for the federal Pell grant is between 13 and 14 percent.

Of 23 colleges and universities in the nation that have graduation rates for black students in the 90s, the average annual cost of tuition and fees is $43,700 and the average percent of the student body that is Pell eligible is 15 percent

For the class of 2018, Yale is 9.8% black, Harvard 12% black, and Princeton 8.1% black. None of these schools have a low black population of 5 or 6 percent. That's completely wrong. Like most elite private colleges, students are admitted by racial quotas which means that black students who apply have a far higher acceptance rate than 6 or 7 percent because they only compete for spots with other black students. That is why this year there was story after story of black males getting into several elite schools each. Kwasi Enin got into all eight Ivy League schools.

Since he claims to be so worried about Pell grant recipients, Dr. Toldson should know that low-income students who attend rich schools like Harvard, Yale, Princeton don't pay full price. These schools offer generous financial aid. In fact if your parents earn less than $60,000 they do not pay anything for your schooling at HYP. On average a low-income student will have to pay $6,000 per year to attend HYP and the school expects the money to come from part-time jobs or outside scholarships not loans.

I'm not a fan of charter schools but they are identifying qualified students and getting them the scholarships and financial aid they need. Leonard Galmon was born to a 13 year old mother and his father was murdered when he was 4 but he was admitted to Yale and is a Ron Brown scholar and will not have to pay a penny for college.
http://www.nola.com/education/index.ssf/2014/05/from_challenges_new_orleans_se.html

Elsie Mayo got kicked out of her DC charter school in the middle of senior year but before that happened her school taught her about scholarships that low-income students like her were eligible for. She now attends Simmons College in Boston majoring in math and computer science. She said the school she wound up in didn't know anything about scholarships.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/local...55e4bc-44a9-11e2-8061-253bccfc7532_story.html
 
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wheywhey

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The Gates Millennium Scholarship is for Pell grant eligible students. It covers all unmet needs through graduate school for up to ten years. The scholarship is awarded after students have accepted admission to a college. The trick to getting the scholarship is to attend a competitive college. The scholarship program is scheduled to end in 2019.

Program Details

Open Date:
8/1/2014 12:01 AM EST

Close Date:
1/14/2015 11:59 PM EST

Program Type:
Scholarship

Donor:
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation

Number of Scholarships:
1000 per year

Individual Award:
Support for the cost of education by covering unmet need and self-help aid, including graduate school funding for continuing Scholars in the areas of computer science, education, engineering, library science, mathematics, public health or science.

Eligibility Requirements

Minimum GPA
3.3

Ethnicities
African American/Black, American Indian - Alaska Native, Asian Pacific Islander American, Hispanic American
Residency Status
U.S. Citizen, U.S. national or permanent resident

https://www.gmsp.org/
 

wheywhey

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Dr. Umar Johnson gives information on how to get a high SAT score and financial aid.

 

wheywhey

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The title of Dr. Ivory Toldson's article is completely bogus. Colleges don't report the graduation rates of Pell grant recipients.

Colleges Are Supposed to Report Pell Graduation Rates -- Here's How to Make Them Actually Do It
Published: October 30, 2013
Issues:
Since 2008, the federal government has spent nearly $200 billion on the Pell Grant program. We know that this sizeable investment has bought a 50 percent increase in the number of people getting these awards. But how many graduates did these funds produce? What percentage of the individuals graduate? And which schools are doing the best with the lowest-income students?

Congress wanted to know the answer to all these questions. That’s why it included requirements in the 2008 reauthorization of the Higher Education Act (HEA) that required colleges to disclose the graduation rates of Pell Grant recipients, students who did not receive Pell but got a Subsidized Stafford Loan, and individuals who got neither type of aid. But it only asked institutions to disclose this information, either on their websites or potentially only if asked for it, not proactively report it to the Department of Education. The results have gone over about as well as a voluntary broccoli eating contest with toddlers. A 2011 survey of 100 schools by Kevin Carey and Andrew Kelly found that only 38 percent even complied with the requirement to provide these completion rates, in many cases only after repeated phone calls and messages.

Absent institutional rates, the only information of any sort we have about Pell success comes as often as the Olympics, when the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) within the Department updates its large national surveys. These data are great for broad sweeping statements, but cannot report the results for individual institutions, something that’s especially important given the variety of outcomes different schools achieve. Instead, these surveys can only provide information about results by either the sector or Carnegie type of institution. And the surveys are too costly to operate more frequently. [...]

http://higheredwatch.newamerica.net/blogposts/2013/add_pell_grad_rates_to_ipeds-95728
 

wheywhey

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uhhh...study :heh:

Most black and Hispanic students and their parents aren't aware that they need to study. The NAACP and other groups have filed suits against New York City public schools because even though blacks and Hispanics are 70% of public school students only 12% test into the eight specialized high schools like Stuyvesant, Bronx Science, and Brooklyn Tech.

Instead of telling the black and Hispanic students to study for years like the Asian students do, the activists want students to be selected into the schools with other criteria like grades and attendance. The New York City Council held a hearing on the matter last week plus there were some demonstrations protesting the changes.

http://www.theepochtimes.com/n3/113...ns-criteria-for-nyc-specialized-high-schools/
 

wheywhey

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Cost of Ivy League Schools for Students in the Lowest Income Bracket
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wheywhey

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http://www.nytimes.com/2014/12/26/n...e-500-high-school-students-per-counselor.html

Little College Guidance: 500 High School Students Per Counselor
By ELIZABETH A. HARRISDEC. 25, 2014

A steady stream of teenagers fidgeting with forms and their backpacks flowed through the Midwood High School college office one day this month, all with lists of questions on their minds.

But one of the school’s two college counselors was nowhere to be found. She had taken refuge in another office, a quieter spot where she tried to pump out as many college recommendation letters as she could.

“We take turns,” said Lorrie Director, the other college counselor at Midwood, in Brooklyn. “I write at home, at night and on weekends, I squeeze them in when I can, but even then it’s not enough.”

“There’s really no other way,” she continued. “I tell the kids, there are 766 of you, and there’s two of us.”

While small private schools can often afford to provide their students with tremendous hand-holding, large public high schools across the country struggle with staggering ratios of students to guidance counselors. Nationally, that ratio is nearly 500 to 1, a proportion experts say has remained virtually unchanged for more than 10 years. And when it comes time to apply to college, all of the students need help at once.
Photo
y-COUNSELOR-articleLarge.jpg

Lorrie Director, a college counselor at Midwood High School in Brooklyn. The national student-to-counselor ratio is 478 to 1. Credit Andrew Spear for The New York Times'

“It’s a huge problem, massive,” said Mandy Savitz-Romer, a senior lecturer at the Harvard Graduate School of Education who studies school counseling. “Counseling is seen as an extra layer, a luxury. If I’m a school leader and I’m trying to lower class size, what’s 50 more kids on your caseload?”

There are different approaches to shepherding high school students to college. In some schools, like Midwood, there is a small office, separate from the guidance counselors, where a dedicated team handles applications, offers advice and writes scores, or even hundreds, of reference letters. In other schools, guidance counselors or the leaders of advisory groups guide students.

And in some schools, there is nothing. The federal Education Department’s Office for Civil Rights said this year that one in five high schools in the country had no school counselor at all.

When it comes time to apply to college, students who are insufficiently counseled can easily stumble into making poor decisions, especially if no one in their family has gone to college before.

They might “undermatch,” for example, by applying just to nearby schools they have heard of, rather than to the best institution they are qualified to attend. They might not fully understand the financial aid process, and skip over schools with high ticket prices, even if they are eligible for a free ride. And plenty of students who are perfectly qualified to go to college might not apply at all.

The issue has received increasing attention. New York City has hired 250 new guidance counselors this year alone, and the City Council recently passed a bill that would require the city’s Education Department to report on the number of counselors and their ratio to students. Just this month, Michelle Obama, at a White House conference on increasing access to college, spoke about the importance of college counseling.

Nonetheless, the national student-to-counselor ratio, according to the National Association for College Admission Counseling, is 478 to 1, nearly double the recommendation of the American School Counselor Association.

Until this fall, Shelly Landry spent six years as the head of school counseling for the school district of Minneapolis. Minnesota has a ratio of nearly 800 students for every counselor, Ms. Landry said, giving it the second highest ratio in the nation, behind California.

In that role, she became familiar with the coping mechanisms of certain overworked school counselors: They would simply reuse the same college reference letter over and over again, plugging in new student information as they went.
“They will tell you,” Ms. Landry said of some college admissions officers, “that when I get a letter from such-and-such counselor, I don’t even read it, because I know their letter.”

Not every college requires a recommendation from a school counselor, though most selective ones do. Those schools generally understand the pressures at large high schools and will not hold it against their students if the letters appear too fill-in-the-blank, said Katherine Cohen, the founder of IvyWise, an admissions consulting firm in Manhattan. But Kim Nauer, education project director at The New School’s Center for New York City Affairs, said a weak letter can be a lost opportunity for a senior with less-than-stratospheric SAT scores.

“The numbers are not in these kids’ favor,” she said. “They need the words.”

Even in the face of daunting ratios, said Ms. Landry, there are schools where the college process gets done, and appears to be done well.

At Francis Lewis High School in Queens, which has more than 4,000 students, about a dozen parents volunteer every year to help process application materials and stuff envelopes for colleges that do not accept electronic submissions.

At Midwood, which has about 3,900 students, 74 percent of students were enrolled in a college or postsecondary program six months after graduation, according to city data, well above the city average of 51 percent. (About half of Midwood’s students apply to the high school based on measures like their grades, and the rest of the student body is pulled from the surrounding neighborhoods.)

There are two college counselors at Midwood for about 800 seniors each year, most of whom apply to college. The office’s support staff has been cut in recent years from five people to two.

But the school’s guidance counselors are trained to get students thinking about college in advance and to answer some basic questions about the process. The entire guidance department has attended an Education Department Options Series, a training at the Goddard Riverside Community Center intended to help get students to college. The college counselors at Midwood also speak to the students in groups, in workshops and during some of their class time junior year.

With so many students to sort through, they also have systems in place to ensure that they know as much as possible about their charges — and that they are writing about the correct person.

On a recent rainy afternoon, heavy boxes stuffed with long manila folders were stacked around the college office, a room covered with dozens of school posters and pennants, from Howard University, Brown, Arizona State, Stony Brook University and the College of Saint Rose, to name a few.

On the cover of each folder is basic student information, like a name, contact information and test scores. The student’s photograph is also affixed to the front, because, as Sharon Kaminer, the college office secretary, explained, the large school often sees several seniors with the same name.

Inside, the folders contain teacher recommendations, an autobiographical essay and a student profile the applicants fill out, as well as a “parent brag sheet” that asks questions like, “If you had to describe your child choosing only five-six adjectives, which ones would you use?”

Students lined up that afternoon to ask questions about financial aid forms, for example, or about what their immigration status might mean for a particular application.

One girl brought chocolate chip cookies because, she explained, she asks a lot of questions. She said her goodbyes, left the office and was immediately replaced by somebody else.

“We get it done — I don’t know how, but we get it done,” Ms. Director said over the telephone. She laughed, and added, “You can quote Sharon on that: with a little bit of fairy dust.”
 
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