Quick Search

Active Bloggers

How May I Help You NC How May I Help You NC
Bellarmine University class of 2021
Shykeria Lifleur Shykeria Lifleur
Other College... class of
Robert  Walker Robert Walker
Alabama State University class of 1982
Jordan Davis Jordan Davis
University of the District of Columbia class of 2025
Min Sammy Jackson Min Sammy Jackson
class of 1975
HBCU CONNECT HBCU CONNECT
Central State University class of 1995
Joel Savage Joel Savage
class of 1993
Randi Payton Randi Payton
University of the District of Columbia class of 1982
Jennifer Toone Corrigan Jennifer Toone Corrigan
class of

Historically black colleges still play a key role

Historically black colleges still play a key role
Posted By: How May I Help You NC on May 18, 2012


By STEVEN GRAY

Sunday, May 13, 2012

Despite facing financial odds, black colleges offer ways for students to become job creators.

Sometime in the early '80s, before I turned 10, my grandmother told me: "You should go to Howard." In our family, Howard University was this revered place, partly because one of my uncles had been a quarterback there in the late '70s. But I dismissed the idea, almost as fiercely as I resisted football, having grown up in mostly private, predominately white schools where everyone, it seemed, aimed for the Ivy League. By the mid-'90s, my parents made clear: "If we're paying for college, you're going to a black school."

Maybe it was something they'd heard in my voice. Or my preference for Madonna, Michael Jackson and Depeche Mode. Or my rejection of the black Pentecostal church they'd started attending. Here's what they were really saying: "Our middle-class kid is confused and needs to figure out he's black." So, reluctantly, I went to Howard.

Historically black colleges and universities, or HBCUs, are on the brain partly because two weeks ago, there was a White House conference on how the schools can be entrepreneurial hubs. It's an important conversation that reflects the country's startup economy: Some schools are, smartly, launching programs to train not only the next generation of employees but independent job creators. The conference was notable for its venue, and President Barack Obama himself has said this about HBCUs: "It's because of these schools that the black middle class is filled with black doctors, lawyers and engineers. It's because of these schools that one of every two wide-eyed freshmen is the first in his or her family to go to college." Still, I left the White House thinking not only about entrepreneurship but also the question of HBCU relevance.



It might seem like a strange question. But consider that budget pressures are forcing state legislatures and the federal government to reconsider financial support for HBCUs. The schools are turning to private financial sources and recruiting nonblack students. The number of black students in college is growing, and nearly 80 percent of them attend non-HBCUs. That should be viewed as a measure of social progress, a reflection of greater access to choice often driven by predominately white schools' rich endowments. Still, HBCUs produce about 40 percent of America's black science graduates and a significant share of its doctors, judges and business owners.

Can HBCUs become entrepreneurial talent hotbeds? It's worth taking a look at the all-female Bennett College in North Carolina, where its president, the economist Julianne Malveaux, has claimed many of her students will work for themselves at some point in their lives.

Four years ago, Bennett opened the Center for Entrepreneurial Studies, which now directs about 30 students through an entrepreneurship minor in courses such as accounting, marketing and finding government contracting opportunities. One student proposed turning half of Bennett's vacant greenhouse into a farm. The first vegetables will be ready to hit the market soon. At a moment when the country's competitiveness depends on an educated, innovative and diverse workforce, entrepreneurship is one additional area in which HBCUs can prepare students to excel and ultimately continue to be relevant institutions of learning for new generations.

Steven Gray is a contributing editor to The Root.

This article was published on page D3 of the Sunday, May 13, 2012 edition of The Columbia Daily Tribune.

More: http://www.columbiatribune.com/
If you enjoyed this article, Join HBCU CONNECT today for similar content and opportunities via email!
Comments
Please Login To Post Comments...
Email:
Password:

 
More From This Author
How AI will change real estate: A keynote by Chris Kelly
The Greatest Gift You Can Give Yourself This Holiday is Perspective
What is the Best Chocolate Milk?
All About Leaf Cutter Ants!! - La Fortuna, Costa Rica
How to watch on Roku Jack Hanna's Into the Wild
Where to Watch Jack Hanna's Wild Countdown
Latest News
Popular News
Louisiana Upholds Life Sentence to Black Man For Stealing Hedge Trimmers in 1997

Louisiana Upholds Life Sentence to Black Man For Stealing Hedge Trimmers in 1997

While this may not be HBCU related news, as an AFrican American male, I had to share this appalling decision by the Louisiana court system to keep a man in jail with a life sentence for such a petty c ...more
Will Moss • 402,245 Views • August 6th, 2020
Blonde Instagram Model Goes Viral for Graduating from HBCU and Pledging Delta Sigma Theta!

Blonde Instagram Model Goes Viral for Graduating from HBCU and Pledging Delta Sigma Theta!

A blonde woman is going viral this morning, for graduating from A Historically Black College while pledging a Black sorority, Delta Sigma Theta Sorority Incorporated. @Blonde_HBCU The woman, an IG ...more
Will Moss • 186,308 Views • November 30th, 2020
Apple to Invest over $40 Million Dollars into HBCUs - Time to major in Computer Science!!!

Apple to Invest over $40 Million Dollars into HBCUs - Time to major in Computer Science!!!

On Tuesday Johnny C. Taylor, President and CEO of the Thurgood Marshall College Fund stopped by “NewsOne Now” to make a major announcement that could literally change the lives of thousands of HBCU st ...more
Will Moss • 128,233 Views • March 11th, 2015
North Carolina HBCU Unity Day

North Carolina HBCU Unity Day

Shaw University - Elizabeth City State University - Johnson C. Smith University - Fayetteville State University - Livingstone College - North Carolina A&T State University - North Carolina Central Uni ...more
Reginald Culpepper • 104,901 Views • August 8th, 2016
Black Billionaire Robert F. Smith to  Donate $50 Million to Support STEM Students at HBCUs

Black Billionaire Robert F. Smith to Donate $50 Million to Support STEM Students at HBCUs

The Student Freedom Initiative announced today a $50 million personal gift from Robert F. Smith, philanthropist and Founder, Chairman and CEO of Vista Equity Partners. This gift matches the initial fu ...more
Will Moss • 83,529 Views • October 22nd, 2020
Please Give Us a Like on Facebook!