Saturday, April 11, 2020
Black Colleges Essays - Historically Black Colleges And Universities
  Black Colleges  In the world we live in today a person can almost choose any college or  university they want to to continue their education upon graduation from high  school. It really doesn't matter if it is a four year, two year, or technical  school, there is a school for any person in any major. What draws a person to  attend one certain kind of school compared to another? In this case why is there  an increase in Black students attending Black colleges in the past decade? One  might say, "Well how can you tell that more students are getting into these  colleges, rather than these schools accepting an increased number of students  each year?" These are all important questions to ask, and there are  numerous reasons and causes for schools to increase the number of students they  allow and the number of students wanting to attend these colleges. I have an  older brother and an older sister who both attend a historically black college (HBCU),    Central State University in Wlberforce, Ohio. I have always had a lifelong dream  of attending an HBCU. In fact I was accepted to both Virginia Union in Richmond  and North Carolina A&T in Greensboro before I was accepted into Wright State    University. My main reason for wanting to attend these schools was the history  that they have and the way they made me feel when I went for visits. Those are  my personal reasons for wanting to attend these schools, but there are more than  personal reasons people are starting to have a higher interest in attending  these schools. Lowery 2 For the past three years my church back home in Columbus  has held an annual Black College Tour. It is designed to garner the interest of  the young people at my church and all around Columbus in HBCU's. I was a student  the first year and a chaperone the last two. In visiting these schools one can  find that the administration at these colleges and universities do anything they  can to get you admitted to these schools. Almost all of them are rated among the  best schools in the nation, too. These are no small time schools. Some students  are finding it easier to go to HBCU's because of the recent Supreme Court  rulings on Affirmative Action. They feel that it will be harder for them to have  an equal chance of being accepted to non Black colleges and universities. Most  of those people don't want to put up with all the mess that goes on in those  universities today, where even still, in 1997, people are admitted because of  physical appearances and not mental capabilities ("Straight Talk" 122    123). Speaking in those terms people just do not want to deal with downright  racism. Some HBCU's in areas with lots of non Black colleges usually have  increased enrollment due to past histories and events that happened at the  schools. An example was in Florida in 1988. Incidents of racism on the major    White college campuses caused a 19 percent increase at Florida A&M    University in Tallahassee, another HBCU. It was recorded as the largest increase  in enrollment of any of the colleges in the state. Of the 1,876 coeds in the  system, 1,327 were enrolled at Florida A&M, while the other universities  enrolled the rest ("Racism" 22). Even now Florida A&M has  increased enrollment at the school. They reported about 100 more freshman in  this year's class than last year's (Geraghty A46). There are some students who  are starting to attend HBCU's because of their feeling of deprivation of black  culture in their lives. In an article in The Lowery 3 Black Collegian last year,  a young man, only referring to himself as "The Invisible Man" to  readers, wrote to the editor about attending an HBCU after having gone to  predominantly White schools all of his life. He chose to attend a Black school  because, "I felt very intimidated by my ignorance of Black history,  culture, language, and everything else that I have missed in my previous  education" (qtd. in Parker 21). After attending his first semester in  school, "Invisible Man" found he was what he called a "Cultural    Zombie." He chose to stay at the school to educate himself about the  culture that he was left in the cold by his family. He says his family is Black,  but never emphasized being black and the culture that comes with it. One thing  he say's he has learned from his unnamed school is who he is and his role as    
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