The Reporter (Vacaville)

The pride — and value — of Black Colleges

- The Vacaville author is a social issues advocate. 2022 Women of the Year Congressio­nal Award Recipient. E-mail: damitchell@earthlink.net

Considerin­g the United States Supreme Court decision that ended affirmativ­e action two months ago, many Black people recommend the community migrate back to Historical­ly Black Colleges and Universiti­es created for Black people.

Actually, Black people should have never forgotten that these schools (HBCUs) served as a safety net before society invented an artificial construct in which a few Black people from Ivy League institutio­ns were allowed to succeed and land in board rooms, says J. Michael Brown.

Brown, director of PreLaw and Constituti­onal Studies Program at Simmons College, an HBCU, added that most Black profession­als were educated elsewhere.

Since 1837, historical­ly Black colleges and universiti­es have been fighting for students' rights to higher education and remain relevant.

Today, Mount Calvary Baptist Church will host its annual HBCUs recruitmen­t fair to expose young people to many of our nation's predominat­ely Black education institutio­ns. The church hosted the first event in 2007.

The late Emeritus Rev. Claybon Lea, Mount Calvary's founding pastor, valued education. His son, the Rev. Dr. Claybon Lea Jr., the church's senior pastor, supports HBCUs because of their emphasis on African-American history and heritage and their commitment to the educationa­l achievemen­ts of Black students. Dr. Lea is an HBCU graduate of Morehouse College in Atlanta.

The church's scholarshi­p ministry is sponsoring the free recruitmen­t fair in collaborat­ion with United College Action Network, Inc. (U-CAN). It is open to the public from 4 to 7 p.m. at the church's Fairfield campus, 1735 Enterprise Dr., Bldg. 3.

U-CAN is a 501c (3) nonprofit corporatio­n that provides leadership services and college preparatio­n assistance to students desiring to enroll in four-year postsecond­ary colleges, focusing on admissions to more than 100 HBCUs, according to the website.

Each year, representa­tives from more than 35 HBCUs offer students and parents informatio­n on hundreds of majors and degree programs, as well as on-the-spot admissions from selected colleges, if qualified. Qualified students have also received scholarshi­ps; some college fees have been waived at the event.

High-school students can register for the fair online at gotocolleg­efairs. swoogo.com/ucan-registrati­on. Or visit ucangotoco­llege.org. They can also call 280-4793.

Seniors should bring to the recruitmen­t fair 15 copies of current unofficial transcript­s and their SAT/ ACT test scores if available. Juniors, please bring at least seven of your unofficial transcript­s, said organizers.

Young people, especially Black Americans, should consider HBCUs a viable first choice when setting educationa­l goals.

In addition to a highqualit­y, equality-based education, HBCUs are smaller than many community colleges, allowing close associatio­n with professors and other students in a nurturing environmen­t that supports individual achievemen­t with mentoring, role models, networking, and positive cultural history.

The late Dr. Milton Combs, a longtime professor who taught at Solano Community College, once said that HBCUs have graduated many Black Americans who later became successful profession­als, business leaders, educators, government, civic and religious leaders.

He said these institutio­ns helped to build the Black middle class and, through their college campus reserve officers' training corps, prepared many students for the military, especially at the officer level.

Many HBCUs have toprated programs in different fields and, in some cases, said Dr. Combs, are providing higher education equal to and exceeding similar programs offered at several mainstream colleges and universiti­es. Some HBCUs have world-class facilities and technology.

Many businesses and companies, wanting to diversify their workforce often recruit at HBCU campuses.

Famous HBCU alums include Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., U.S. Rep. Barbara Jordan, Nobel Prize writer Toni Morrison, media mogul Oprah Winfrey and Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall.

In previous columns, I have written that HBCUs were founded to educate Black people and equip them to be competitiv­e across the board.

HBCUs belong to Black people and should function as research institutio­ns and data centers for guiding Black economic revitaliza­tion, reparation­s and political leadership.

HBCUs should also establish advisory boards to identify trends and industry changes, suggesting new directions in academic preparatio­n to lead Black colleges into the future.

No college is perfect. However, I believe young people choosing an HBCU will benefit from feeling pride and belonging.

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