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Section: Students
Students
Through these eyes – photographs of P.H. Polk – Illustration
From 1939 until his death in 1984, Prentice Herman Polk taught It photography at Tuskegee Institute (now Tuskegee University) and was the official Campus Photographer. In 1933, he became chair of the university’s photography department. Polk owned one of Macon County, Alabama’s few private photography Studios and became a renowned portrait photographer.
July 11, 2007
Students
Black Women in the Academy: Promises and Perils. – book reviews
As a Black female psychologist who has worked in many settings — most recently in a university setting — and as a student who attended a predominantly White university in the Northeast, I can vividly recall the feelings of belonging and support that I experienced in meeting other members of the Black Graduate Student Association. Only within that fellowship at the predominantly White university which I attended did I feel whole.
July 11, 2007
Students
The pied piper of college golf – National Minority Junior Golf Scholarship Assn. founder and Pres. Bill Dickey
Bill Dicky More Than Just a Fairway Friend to College-Bound Youth
July 11, 2007
Students
Chancellor of Southern University resigns amid scholarship flap – Marvin Yates
BATON ROUGE, La. The chancellor of Southern University’s Baton Rouge campus abruptly resigned in the wake of a scholarship scandal.
July 11, 2007
Students
Scholarship scandal in Louisiana
Baton Rouge, La. Last fall when William “Bud” Davis, the chancellor of State University, suddenly resigned his position in the wake of charges that his office awarded nearly fifty minority scholarships to White students, many educators and politicians around the state sighed a collective relief that this most recent scholarship fiasco appeared to end as Davis departed.
July 11, 2007
Students
Historically Black Bluefield State’s ironic situation: desperately seeking Black students and faculty – Bluefield State College, West Virginia
Bluefield, W. Va. When a historically Black university fails to sustain, say, a ten percent African American student population, People are bound to start talking. Well, they have.
July 11, 2007
Students
Senate clears student aid, HBCU funding bill – historically Black colleges and universities
Six weeks into fiscal year 1998, Congress has finally completed action on legislation that will boost funding for historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUs), TRIO, and many student-aid programs through next year.
July 11, 2007
Students
Derrick Bell: keeper of the flame – author of ‘Confronting Authority’ and Afro-American law professor at New York University
Editor’s note: No discussion of a commitment to diversity in higher education would be complete without talking to Derrick Bell. Unfortunately, as Black Issues was preparing the following article, Professor Bell fell ill and was unavailable for an interview. Black Issues is happy to report that at press time he was reported as doing better.
July 11, 2007
Students
Reality infused into Livingstone’s teacher education program: early successes seen with African American male instructors – Livingstone College in North Carolina
The chart below looks at student in institutions and departments offering teacher education. It is subdivided into five blocks, one comparing actual numbers, the other four comparing percentages. The chart reads as follows:
July 11, 2007
Students
Through the eyes of a student – account of a student who attended a college fair
Editorial note: An institution’s purpose for attending a college fair is to attract high school students to their campuses. Black Issues thought it would be interesting to hear from a student who attended. The following is his report.
July 11, 2007
Students
The money chase: videoconference participants get insider tips on ethnic philanthropy – Panel Discussion
Washington When it comes to ethnic philanthropy, a couple of things need to be clear. First, the color that really counts is not Black, White, Brown, or Red, but green – as in dollar green. Second, without know how and persistence, pleas for funding will likely not be heard regardless of the nobility or desperation of the plea.
July 11, 2007
Students
College ends race-based scholarship programs at behest of Education Department – Northern Virginia Community College
ANNANDALE, Va. A Virginia community college will end five small ace-based scholarship programs following a complaint filed with the U.S. Education Department’s Office for Civil Rights.
July 11, 2007
Students
Controversial plan may cut student loan costs – student loan provision
Low- and middle-income college students could get a break on their student loans next year — if Congress can defy the wishes of private lenders.
July 11, 2007
Students
Increasing power, not just numbers – senior-level African American administrators
Since the late 1960s, there has been a substantial increase in the number of senior-level African American administrators at traditionally White institutions. However, I contend that this increase conveys a partly false perception, and that perception leads one to believe that a goal of higher education — racial equalization — has been achieved.
July 11, 2007
Students
Home shopping network: CD-ROMs facilitate college search process
With a seventeen-year-old high school junior for a son, the time has come once again to go college shopping. And as one of those guys who hates to shop, I naturally was looking for something that would allow me to visit a university or two hundred without leaving home. After all, travel expenses can be…well, expensive.
July 11, 2007
Students
The virtual classroom – new technology for teaching African American literature – includes related article on Western Governor’s University – Cover Story
Bryan Carter is devoted to teaching African American literature from the Harlem Renaissance era, a period considered one of the most creative in American history.
July 11, 2007
Students
Black Teachers on Teaching. – book reviews
Does American society want to educate all of its children? An optimist would respond that of course it does, but it just can’t seem to provide equity in its distribution of resources and educational outcomes. Others would argue that social, political and economic forces create hurdles which slow or completely retard the flow of positive educational goods and benefits into certain communities.
July 11, 2007
Students
Robbing Peter to pay Paul – reauthorizing the higher education act
Reauthorizing the higher education act amid the new political reality means some programs may lose so that others might gain.
July 11, 2007
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