
Do we still need Historically Black Colleges and Universities
(HBCUs)? It’s a question that even some Blacks are asking.
Interestingly, those same people never ask whether Catholics still need
Notre Dame or whether women still need Wellesley College? The answer is
that we need all of those colleges. According to the National
Center for Education and the Economy, by the year 2020, the United
States will need 14 million more college-trained workers than it will
produce. Considering the record of HBCUs, we should be asking how we
can make sure they’re around at least another century. The
National Center for Education Statistics report that although Black
colleges represent only 3 percent of the nation’s universities, they
produce 23.6 percent of all bachelor’s degrees earned by Blacks. The
numbers are even larger in the physical, mathematical, biological and
agricultural sciences, where HBCUs account for more than 40 percent of
bachelor’s degrees earned by African-Americans. HBCUs confer 13.1
percent of master’s degrees earned by African-Americans and 10.6
percent of all doctoral degrees. Not only are Black colleges still needed, they are indispensible. In
the interest of full disclosure, I am chairman of the Board of Trustees
at Knoxville College, my alma mater. And I know first-hand the problems
many Black colleges, especially small private ones, are experiencing.
Facing competition from predominantly White universities, limited
finances and poor oversight, many of these colleges are fighting to
stay alive. In the case of Knoxville College, we’re trying to
regain accreditation that was lost a decade ago and raise badly-needed
funds. There is good news and bad news. The bad news is that
organizations set up specifically to assist Black colleges – the United
Negro College Fund (UNCF) and the National Association for Equal
Opportunity in Higher Education (NAFEO) -- fail to help troubled Black
institutions when they need them the most. In order to get assistance
from the organizations, colleges must be accredited. It’s a Catch-22 –
you get help when you need it least. The good news is that help
comes from other sources. Beyond spotlighting Knoxville as College of
the Month, as it has done in the past, the Tom Joyner Foundation has
been a source of funds and inspiration. It’s such an uphill struggle
that even trustees and college officials get discouraged from time to
time. But seeing what the Joyner Foundation has done and is doing,
recharges all of our batteries. For example, this summer the
foundation rehabilitated a dorm that will be used this fall. In
addition, it has helped with student recruitment and is holding a
fundraiser in Knoxville next December. We’ve also received help
from the White House Initiative on HBCUs. Executive Director Leonard L.
Haynes and Deputy Director Ronald E. Blakely have directed the college
to numerous resources. Southern Christian Leadership Conference
President Charles Steel has pledged to establish a Conflict Resolution
Training Center on campus. It would be shortsighted to think
this is only about saving a college. It’s about saving lives. A few
years ago, Nadir F. Johnson moved to Knoxville with plans to sell
drugs. Instead, he enrolled at Knoxville College, became president of
the student body and today is a manager in the construction industry. In
this year’s graduating class, one student enrolled in the University of
Massachusetts at Amherst and another enrolled at an Ivy League
institution, the University of Pennsylvania. Even as we rebuild, we are
still turning out excellent students who go on to successful lives. Like many HBCUs, we take a special interest in the student that others have given up on. Anyone
can enroll an ‘A’ or ‘B’ student and take credit for his or her
achievements. But at Knoxville College, while we like the ‘A’ and ‘B’
students, we pride ourselves on taking a chance on the mid- or
low-range students – the ones that can go either way- and guide them to
a successful life. That’s our specialty. Knowing that many
students in this category have delayed applying for college, we will
still accept applications for the next two weeks. For more information,
contact the admissions office at 865.524.6525 or download the
application at knoxvillecollege.edu. Knoxville College alumni
include Jake Gaither, the legendary football coach who won more than 85
percent of his games at Florida A&M and never had a losing season;
Bishop Warren Brown (AME Zion); Dr. Willie E. May, a division head at
the National Institute of Standards and Technology; American Baptist
College President Forrest Harris; Dr. Edith Irby Jones, the first
female president of the National Medical Association; Dr. Joseph Gay,
former president of the National Dental Association; C. Virginia
Fields, former two-term Manhattan Borough president; Vernon Jarrett,
first Black columnist for the Chicago Tribune and so many others. I
am convinced that some of our students will go on to distinguish
themselves as so many others have. That’s why trustees and school
officials are fighting so hard to keep the doors of Knoxville College
open. We urge others to join with us on this sacred mission. As
Dr. Martin Luther King said, “The ultimate measure of a man is not
where he stands in moments of comfort and convenience, but where he
stands at times of challenge and controversy.”
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