The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

North Carolina A&T: A powerhouse rises in Greensboro

School quietly makes moves to become best historical­ly black college in the United States.

- By Ernie Suggs esuggs@ajc.com CJOYNER@AJC.COM

GREENSBORO — It was the week before Thanksgivi­ng, and Aggie Stadium was awash with blue and gold.

North Carolina A&T State University had just defeated its archrival, North Carolina Central University, 24-10 to earn the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference championsh­ip and a berth in the Celebratio­n Bowl in Atlanta. The bowl was in December, and the undefeated Aggies blew out traditiona­l HBCU power Grambling State.

In winning the national championsh­ip, A&T proved to be the best black-college football team in the country. But over the last decade, North Carolina Agricultur­al and Technical State University — known for its engineerin­g programs and upholding a legacy that includes “The Greensboro Four,” Jesse Jackson and Ronald McNair — has moved quietly and resolutely to toward its goal of becoming the best black college in the country.

“This is truly an exciting time to be an Aggie,” said Chancellor Harold L. Martin Sr.

With 11,877 students enrolled this fall — including a record 2,309 freshmen — A&T continues to be the largest black college in the country, having surpassed Howard University, Florida A&M, Jackson State and Texas Southern. Those new freshmen came on campus with an average GPA of 3.51.

“We are fortunate to have been trending in the upward direction for the last few years,” said Erin Hill Hart, A&T’s associate vice provost for enrollment. “There is no question of where we trying to go and when we are going to get there.”

The school, founded in 1891, has added more than 1,300 students in five years; by 2020, A&T plans to enroll 13,500.

“We are very fortunate in North Carolina,” Hart said. “We receive good support from the state. If you pull up any other state, it is not the same, and that is heartbreak­ing.”

While Louisiana, Mississipp­i and South Carolina have been cutting back on higher ed spending, A&T is among the best-supported black public colleges in the nation.

For the 2017-18 and 2018-19 fiscal years, the state of North Carolina allocated A&T $91 million annually. That pales to the nearly half billion that the flagship University of North Carolina receives, but it is more than any other public HBCU in the state and more than at least four public predominan­tly white colleges in North Carolina.

This spring, A&T plans to open its largest building — a new 150,000-square foot student center. The university has also broken ground on the $90 million Engineerin­g Research and Innovation Complex (ERIC).

A&T’s College of Engineerin­g produces more African-American engineers than any university in the nation.

“We love that students, who can go anywhere, are choosing North Carolina A&T to pursue their engineerin­g degrees,” said Robin Coger, the dean of the engineerin­g school. “That means we have been vetted by the parents and students as the place they want to trust. We know that the academics of the students is their priority.”

“When I was there, we could see the progress happening, and that was 15 years ago. So the school’s success is no surprise to me,” said software designer Horace Williams, a 2004 A&T graduate.

Williams, who lives in Atlanta, graduated from A&T in 3.5 years. He recently launched “Empowrd,” an app that instantly shows you who your elected leaders are and connects you with their phone numbers and email addresses.

“A&T instilled in me a confidence in my own intelligen­ce. I went to A&T on academic probation because I almost flunked out of high school,” he said. “But I had people there who when they saw me struggling pushed me. When they saw me doing well, they pushed me harder. That is a hard thing to do when you have so many students, so you know they were doing it on purpose.”

The Coleman family of Charlotte has divided loyalties. Father Troy went to A&T. Mother Danielle went to North Carolina Central. A few months ago, after A&T defeated Central, the Colemans’ daughter, 12-year-old Logan, innocently asked her mom for help fixing her hair. But Danielle couldn’t look past the blue “Future Aggie” sweatshirt Logan was wearing.

She refused to help unless Logan changed her “offensive sweatshirt.” But the seventh-grader reminded her mother that her father gave her the shirt and that it was “College Day” at school.

Coleman promised to buy her an NCCU shirt for Christmas. Logan declined the offer, however, announcing that she was going to A&T to join the marching band as a Golden Delight Dancer.

“I had no comeback for that,” Coleman said.

“How do I compete with her aspiration­s to be a Golden Delight Dancer? I may have to concede that this Coleman girl is going to follow her dad’s footsteps and attend North Carolina A&T. I can live with that.”

Coleman carefully tied a golden bow into her daughter’s hair.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY NORTH CAROLINA A&T ?? Students cheer at 2017 graduation day at North Carolina A&T State University. With more than 10,000 students, the Greensboro college is now the biggest HBCU in the nation.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY NORTH CAROLINA A&T Students cheer at 2017 graduation day at North Carolina A&T State University. With more than 10,000 students, the Greensboro college is now the biggest HBCU in the nation.
 ?? CHRIS JOYNER / ?? “A&T instilled in me a confidence in my own intelligen­ce,” said software designer Horace Williams, a 2004 A&T graduate.
CHRIS JOYNER / “A&T instilled in me a confidence in my own intelligen­ce,” said software designer Horace Williams, a 2004 A&T graduate.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY JESSIE GLADDEK. ?? Members of Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia Fraternity of America Inc. on the campus of North Carolina A&T State University.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY JESSIE GLADDEK. Members of Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia Fraternity of America Inc. on the campus of North Carolina A&T State University.

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