This is a useful, short interview about HBCUs in the 21st century.

 

Know Justice, Know Peace,

Rev. Dr. E-K. Daufin, Professor of Communication

ASU FSA Co-VP for Faculty, AEJMC MAC Officer

Alabama State University, 915 S. Jackson St.

Montgomery, AL 36101-0271 PH:334-229-6885

Thanks in advance for your research & creative activity referrals: http://home.earthlink.net/~ekdaufin

 

With all my  heart I want work that I love; for abundant pay; in a beautiful, functional, comfortable environment; with/for kind, competent, happy, supportive people who love, enjoy and appreciate me and I they. Ashe.

 

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SUNDAY CONVERSATION

Q&A: UNCF president: Don’t close historically black colleges

By ROSALIND BENTLEY

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Sunday, December 07, 2008

Last week, state Senate Higher Education Chairman Seth Harp (R-Midland) suggested that the University System should merge two of Georgia’s historically black colleges, Savannah State and Albany State, with majority-white institutions. It would save money, he said, and it would close an “ugly chapter” in the state’s segregated history. Not so fast, said Michael Lomax, president and CEO of the United Negro College Fund. Lomax is a former Fulton County Commission chairman and former president of Dillard University, a historically black school in New Orleans. He also has served on the board of advisers of the White House Initiative on Historically Black Colleges and Universities. Here, the graduate of Morehouse College, Columbia and Emory universities talks about education and what race has to do with it.

Q: People said they never thought they’d see a black man elected president of the United States. It has happened, and it’s seen as a sign of progress. Do you think we’ll live to see a day when HBCUs are no longer necessary, and would that represent progress?

A: I don’t think it would represent progress when any college is no longer necessary.

Q: So what is the definition of a historically black college or university (HBCU)?

A: Being a historically black college has nothing to do with even its enrollment. It has to do with why it was founded. [It’s an HBCU if] it was founded to educate black people before the Civil Rights Act [of 1965]. That’s a historical fact that can’t change. Demographics may change, and the institutions may have a large number of white students or even a majority of white students.

Q: That’s probably news to a lot of people.

A: My job is to take people from being ignorant to educated [laughs]. But you know, when people see a category that says “historically black,” they just assume that means “exclusively black.” And that isn’t the case.

Q: Isn’t this, in part, a question of identity? Meaning that, once a school has been absorbed by another, its brand ceases to exist, that its history no longer matters?

A: Historically black colleges are nurturing environments, and there’s a certain amount of tough love. Those are characteristics of HBCUs. But another characteristic is that these are institutions where organizations and the culture of the black community thrive. They are places where, for four years in their lives, black kids get to be just kids who happen to be black and not be the outsider or the stranger. They value that experience and, when they get their degrees, they don’t want to see that experience lost for future generations.

Q: Can’t a black student get those things on a campus that’s not predominantly black?

A: American higher education isn’t one-size-fits-all. It is diverse. You have historically Jewish institutions. You have Catholic schools. You have single-gender institutions. You have a real mixture. So different people can find that different environment that suits them.

Q: Some people think a degree from a black university doesn’t measure up to one from a nonblack institution.

A: No. 1, any accredited college or university in this country meets the standards of its regional accrediting body. No. 2, there are close to 4,000 secondary institutions in the country, and they don’t all have the same brand value. I will tell you that, when I set foot at Columbia University in 1969, the Morehouse brand didn’t mean very much. It was not well known. But I can tell you, when you set foot at Columbia University in 2008, the Morehouse brand is a very strong one.

Q: I would expect you to say that.

A: I would say that the best historically black schools are today recognized across the country as highly competitive. They produce leaders.

Q: There was a time when top African-American leaders and members of the black middle class came out of HBCUs, but that’s not the case anymore.

A: My peers thought I was absolutely nuts to be going to Morehouse College. My classmates went to UCLA, Harvard, Yale, Berkeley. Ironically, the kids of my classmates, Generation X and Y, have flooded these historically black institutions.

Q: Even now, in 2008, they’re still necessary?

A: The marketplace says they’re necessary. As long as there are people knocking on their doors saying, “Let me in, I want to go here,” then it’s counter to everything else in America to say, “Well, we’re going to close those down.”

Q: Wait a minute. You said the marketplace. Wouldn’t the proposed mergers involving Savannah State and Albany State save money?

A: In tough economic times, where do you want to make your investment? As a nation, we need to produce more college graduates, not fewer.

Q: But would fewer black kids graduate if the two schools were merged with nonblack colleges?

A: I don’t know. But I would say that the way the suggestion has been made by the Honorable Chairman Seth Harp has been provocative, a bit heavy-handed, and made in a way that has not shown respect for the value that these institutions have to their students, their alumni and the communities in which they exist.