Courtesy of the Education Writers Association
Nearly a century since Black History Week was created, and more than 50 years since February was first recognized as Black History Month, many states and school districts are trying to suppress or control what the public learns about the history of Black people in America. At the same time, much of the news media focus on the educational institutions established to educate formerly enslaved Black people has been negative â focusing on recent bomb threats rather than, for example, a historic rise in enrollment despite the pandemic, or important investments in new programs at schools, such as Howard University.
From Jan. 1 to Feb. 22 this year, Nexis listed a total of 89 articles that included âHBCUâ and âbomb threats.â Only 29 articles mentioned âHBCUâ and âenrollmentâ during the same time period.
Nadrea R. Njoku believes the lack of diversity within the mainstream press is one reason for the focus on bad news. She is the interim director at the United Negro College Fundâs Frederick D. Patterson Research Institute, which researches Black peopleâs education status from preschool to college.
âHBCUs make headlines when negative things happen, but they donât when positive things occur,â she said. âIssues around finances, accreditation, leadership changes have a sensational or scandalous tinge when they happen at HBCUs, but at predominantly white institutions, it isnât magnified or covered with the same urgency.â
Herbert White is an HBCU graduate and editor in chief of the Charlotte Post, the cityâs 150-year old Black weekly newspaper. White attributes much of the biased reporting by mainstream white publications to a lack of awareness and interest. âI believe most journalists overlook HBCUs because they didnât go to them, donât know anyone who did or most likely, consider them âless than in terms of academic prestige or reputation,â White said. âTheyâre only recently discovering HBCUs as institutions beyond the places where Martin Luther King or Oprah Winfrey went to college.â
Reporters who cover these institutions need a certain level of sensitivity and ethical care, Njoku advised. Diversifying reporting and editorial staff and understanding the how and why of HBCUs can go a long way to addressing the problem.
What is an HBCU?
Even many Black people have misconceptions about the history and role of HBCUs in the educational landscape, as evidenced by comments made by Black talk show host Wendy Williams in 2016. âI would be really offended if there was a school that was known as a historically white college. We have historically Black colleges,â Williams said.
Black people didnât devise the term. Higher education institutions established prior to 1964 with the mission to serve Black people were designated as HBCU in The Higher Education Act of 1965, and they were âhistoricallyâ Black because for 100 years post-slavery, they were by and large, the only colleges Blacks could attend.
The first HBCUs were founded in Pennsylvania and Ohio before the Civil War, but the vast majority of todayâs HBCUs (101 in total) were established in the South after the abolition of slavery. During the late 19th and early 20th centuries, prominent Black Americans questioned whether establishing separate schools hindered equality and enshrined segregation. Others debated whether Blacks were better served by vocational training or a more classically âintellectualâ education.
Stories That Should Be Told But Often Arenât
Systemic UnderfundingÂ
One narrative Njoku would like to see go away is the notion of HBCUs doing more with less. Rather than boasting of their scrappy resourcefulness, journalists should ask whatâs the reason for their financial struggles?
âWe have a lack of resources around scientific facilities, technology, infrastructure and, yes, we have innovated with the resources available to us because thereâs no choice,â Njoku said.
The Atlantic staff writer Adam Harris explored the long history of state funding disparities for HBCUs in The State Must Provide: Why Americaâs Colleges Have Always Been Unequal â and How to Set Them Right. Harris details how state governments have systematically deprived these institutions of adequate funding, a practice that continues to this day. Contributions from billionaire philanthropists alone canât overcome a century of systemic underfunding.
The Mission and Impact of HBCUs
âHBCUs are tasked with a different kind of responsibility as education institutions,â White said. âThey are also economic and social mobility engines for a marginalized and underrepresented group. I want our reporters to keep that point in mind, too.â
HBCUs can make an extraordinary impact on social mobility for those who graduate. More than 70% of HBCU enrollees are eligible for Pell Grants when they first enroll. Within six years of graduation, 70% of HBCU alumni are out-earning their parents and are making more than $50,000 a year. And within 10 years, typical first-generation HBCU graduates earn an average of more than $70,000 a year, according to a study by the Frederick Douglass Patterson Research Institute.
HBCUs As Local Economic DriversÂ
In many small and rural towns where HBCUs are located, they are the epicenter of culture and economic growth. They supply jobs at all levels for the surrounding communities, and many people visit the campus to participate in the variety of cultural activities and events.
Whatâs Next for HBCUs
Affirmative action in college admissions has been hotly debated and litigated since the late 1960s when federal law required colleges to consider race as a factor. The Supreme Courtâs decision to hear Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard is a watershed moment. Plaintiffs argue that there is no circumstance under which race should ever be taken into consideration in college admissions, even in the interest of furthering diversity.
As Pulitzer Prize-winning education writer Nikole Hannah-Jones tweeted, the initial intent of affirmative action programs was not to achieve diversity but rather to address âthe structural disadvantage Black Americans faced because they descended from slavery.â
Harris writes in the Atlantic that this court case will likely end all vestiges of affirmative action.
âIf the majority dismisses what remains of the nationâs experiment with affirmative action, the United States will have to face the reality that its system of higher education is, and always has been, separate and unequal,â he wrote.
White agreed but also believes that most HBCUs are in position to take advantage of the changes to come.
âAmerica is browning by the day, and demographics will dictate that every college is going to need every color in the palette to remain viable,â White said. âCampus leaders will need to figure out how to remain relevant to potential students and faculty, regardless of race.â
HBCUs consistently overproduce, accounting for only 3% of public and not-for-profit institutions, yet enroll almost 10% of African American college students nationwide, while yielding 17% of the bachelorâs degrees and a quarter of the STEM degrees earned by Black students, according to the Frederick Douglass Patterson Research Instituteâs study.