Courtesy of Clinton College
Students attending historically Black colleges and universities and other minority-serving institutions can take a wider variety of courses — and stay on track to graduate — through an innovative new partnership. The Southern Regional Education Board (SREB) today announced its HBCU-MSI Course-Sharing Consortium, a collaboration designed to help HBCUs and MSIs enable students to stay on their pathway to on-time graduation. Powered by Acadeum, the consortium brings together public and private institutions to expand students’ access to courses, at the times they need them, within the culture that is a hallmark of the experience at HBCUs and MSIs.
The partnership was born out of the SREB HBCU-MSI Collaborative, which fosters strategic partnerships to increase capacity and improve student success among like-minded institutions. The approach was inspired by Benedict College’s course-sharing partnership with Dillard University for an accelerated winter 2021 term for seniors who needed up to six credit hours to graduate in the spring. That program, made possible in part by a grant from UNCF, helped more than 90% of participants get back on track to graduate this spring.
“We need innovative ways to clear obstacles that stand in the way of students completing their degrees and entering careers that fuel our economy,” said SREB President Stephen L. Pruitt. “When course sharing helps a student get the class she needs for graduation or broadens her study with a class from a different college, that’s a win for all of us.”
The SREB consortium will increase the availability of new and specialized online courses among participating colleges and universities. Courses will count fully toward GPA, financial aid, and graduation requirements at students’ home institutions, ensuring that learners don’t waste credits or time on their path to graduation and rewarding careers. Inaugural participants in the consortium are: Albany State University, Albany, Georgia; Benedict College, Columbia, South Carolina; Clinton College, Rock Hill, South Carolina; Fort Valley State University, Fort Valley, Georgia; Langston University, Langston, Oklahoma; Southeast Arkansas College, Pine Bluff, Arkansas; and Texas Southern University, Houston, Texas. Additional members will be announced in the coming months.
“This initiative is about helping support learners along their journey to and through college with the resources of the HBCU-MSI community,” said Dr. Steven Bloomberg, president of Southeast Arkansas College. “Course sharing is a terrific innovation that expands the options for learning and ensures expanded course access in a way that works for each and every learner.”
Course-sharing continues to grow as a tool to help colleges and universities enable learners to progress and succeed in their pathways. Acadeum’s course-sharing platform has helped over 425 institutions of higher education and features a catalog of more than 40,000 online courses.
“HBCUs and MSIs are an integral part of the fabric of American higher education,” said Dave Daniels, president of Acadeum. “We are proud to help these institutions work together and share resources to ensure that more students get across the stage on time, while also opening unique learning opportunities.”