The Guardian (USA)

‘Laboratori­es of success’: why HBCUs are the best models for race-blind admissions

- Edwin Rios

Ever since Cheyney University opened in 1837, historical­ly Black colleges and universiti­es (HBCUs) have provided educationa­l access to students who were once barred from attending white institutio­ns. By the 1890s, to support newly freed Black Americans following the civil war, more than 200 HBCUs had opened. And by the 1950s, more than 90% of Black undergradu­ates in the country were attending Black schools.

Once the US supreme court ended state-mandated segregatio­n with its 1954 decision in Brown v Board of Education, followed by the introducti­on of affirmativ­e action policies designed to rectify segregatio­n’s effects, the number of Black students at predominan­tly white colleges grew significan­tly. Still, HBCUs remained a touchstone for Black students. So it might be surprising to learn that some experts argue that in light of the supreme court striking down affirmativ­e action earlier this summer, HBCUs could be models for race-blind admissions.

Because of historical racial discrimina­tion by predominan­tly white colleges, HBCUs have valued inclusion, rather than exclusion, since their founding. While it’s true that admitting Black students remains a primary mission for HBCUs, these schools pride themselves on welcoming students from various background­s. “I’m not aware of any HBCU that uses race as a considerat­ion in any determinat­ion,” Danielle Holley, a former dean of Howard University’s law school, told me. According to her, that foundation is what makes HBCUs a “laboratory of success” for educatinga­ll students.

In 1976, for instance, non-Black students made up 15% of students at HBCUs. By 2021, they accounted for a quarter. HBCUs also enroll twice as many students who received Pell grants than other institutio­ns, opening up access for more people who come from low-income background­s. And the institutio­ns are more likely to admit students who haven’t taken advanced courses in high school, a metric which often serves as a barrier for students of color.

Long before admissions officers read their applicatio­ns, students contend with myriad factors that affect their college candidacy. The courses they take, the communitie­s they grew up in, the life experience­s they have had – these variables all shape their access to opportunit­y. Khala Granville, the former associate director of admissions at Indiana University Bloomingto­n, pointed to the long list of inequities that occur before students apply to school that make it harder for them to navigate the admissions process – unequal access to academic counselors who can support and guide them, limited access to an internet connection, disparate discipline of students of color and inequitabl­e funding of their schools, to name a few. Aware of these challenges, Granville told me she helped find ways to look beyond the applicatio­n process itself to bring more racial and ethnic diversity to a predominan­tly white campus.

She and her team went beyond simply visiting high schools, which is standard for most universiti­es. They visited churches and met with community organizati­ons to build deeper relationsh­ips and show that Indiana University could be a place for Black and brown students to thrive. Over the course of Granville’s seven years at the school, the percentage of Black students grew 4% and the percentage of Latino students grew 70%.

When Granville went on to become the admissions director at Morgan State University, an HBCU in Baltimore, Maryland, she noticed a stark difference: a commitment to accessibil­ity had been part of the institutio­n’s mission since it opened in 1867.“Our founding is rooted in inclusion,” she said.

Though it’s customary for universiti­es to ask for essays and recommenda­tion letters, Morgan makes them, along with SAT and ACT scores, optional. Granville had seen how those options could create barriers for students who may not have access to the internet or who have less access to counselors who can guide them through the admissions process. Other HBCU administra­tors agreed. Michael Bailey, the director of undergradu­ate admissions at North Carolina Central University, said that the school does not require essays but will accept them. It also waives standardiz­ed test scores and instead focuses on students’ grades, which are shown to be a better predictor of academic success than tests. “We want to make sure every student we admit is going to be successful when they get here,” Bailey said. “We want to meet them where they are.” HBCUs show that cultivatin­g diversity has to extend beyond the admissions process itself. Granville echoed this sentiment, saying that schools’ investment in students has to be “from the time that they meet us out on the road to the time that they graduate and even beyond”. New guidance on Monday from President Biden’s administra­tion reflects what Granville and other HBCU admissions officers have done long before the affirmativ­e action ban: recruit from areas where students of color live. Meet them where they are.As predominan­tly white institutio­ns navigate how to bring diversity to their campuses without affirmativ­e action, they have to reflect on their own origins as exclusiona­ry institutio­ns and find ways to promote inclusion. That includes creating attractive campus cultures that embrace students from different racial background­s – a fundamenta­l departure from these institutio­ns’ legacies of discrimina­tion.

I’m not aware of any HBCU that uses race as a considerat­ion in any determinat­ion

Danielle Holley, a former dean of Howard University’s law school

 ?? Photograph: Sarah Silbiger/Reuters ?? In 2021, a quarter of students at HBCUs were not Black.
Photograph: Sarah Silbiger/Reuters In 2021, a quarter of students at HBCUs were not Black.

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