By Isabel Yip Debutante balls have traditionally been associated with a particular kind of coming of age: that of teen girls who are well-to-do and, for the most part, white. A newly revived Black debutante ball in Canton, Ohio, uses the cotillion experience as programming for Black girls, many of whom live below the poverty line.
MoreCourtesy of South Carolina State University South Carolina State University has been allocated $8 million in state funding that will take education and research in the College of Science Technology, Engineering, Mathematics and Transportation (STEM-T College) to a new level. Four years in the making, the Research Partnerships and Workforce Training Programs are a partnership between SC
MoreBy Vanessa Grubbs “You have a big voice, Dr. Grubbs,â the clinic manager said. I flinched. The last time I heard similar words, they were part of a common refrain that I had encountered often. âYouâre too direct.â âToo outspoken.â âIntimidating.â Peers who looked like me encouraged me to put my head down, make myself
MoreCourtesy of Pennsylvania State University A recent study led by scholars at the University of Pennsylvania has found nurses working in hospitals with predominately Black patients experienced the highest levels of moral distress during the COVID-19 pandemic. The authors collected data from 3,675 nurses at 90 hospitals from March 2021 to April 2021 and found nurses in
MoreCourtesy of North Carolina A&T State University James Martin II has been named chancellor of North Carolina A&T State University. He will begin his new appointment on August 15. North Carolina A&T State University is the largest historically Black college or university in the United States, enrolling over 11,800 undergraduate and 1,600 graduate students. Black
MoreCourtesy of Florida A&M University Florida A&M University (FAMU) has secured over $50 million in funding appropriations from the State Legislature and signed by Gov. Ron DeSantis. The funding will enable FAMU to ramp up efforts to improve student graduation and retention rates and recruit and retain world-class faculty. The legislative allocations also address the statewide nursing shortage with support
MoreBy Pyper Harvey As the founding director of the Howard University Center for HBCU Research, Leadership, and Policy, Melanie Carter, Ph.D., believes strongly in forming scholarly connections through learning. âTeaching fuels all the work that I do,â Carter explained. âThe opportunity to engage and learn from burgeoning scholars and higher education professionals elevates my perspectives
MoreCourtesy of Spelman College Historically Black Spelman College in Atlanta recently won the fourth-annual Market Madness competition as part of Goldman Sachsâ HBCU Possibilities Program. For placing first in the academic competition, the college was awarded a $1 million grant. The HBCU Possibilities Program stems from Goldman Sachsâ five-year commitment to historically Black college and
MoreBy Matthew Arrojas Democrats are making another push to increase the maximum Pell Grant award as the 2024 election season heats up. Thirty-three senators and 28 members of the House of Representatives co-introduced the Pell Grant Preservation and Expansion Act on Thursday. The bill, among other things, would nearly double the maximum Pell Grant award and tie
MoreBy Randall Barnes Dr. Rochelle L. Ford, the eighth president of Dillard University, has announced her resignation effective July 1st per reporting by Gabriella Killett and Gordon Russell of NOLA.com. According to a university statement released on Friday, Dr. Ford is stepping down âto focus on her health and family.â According to Killett and Russell, Erroll Williams, the
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