The Sacramento Bee

Sacramento State chosen as hub for Black student success

- BY DARRELL SMITH dvsmith@sacbee.com Darrell Smith: 916-321-1040, @dvaughnsmi­th

Sacramento State will be the home of a new center for Black student success to develop programs across the 23-campus California State University system and in underserve­d communitie­s throughout the state, officials announced Thursday.

An initial $1.3 million will fund the CSU Statewide Central Office for the Advancemen­t of Black Excellence, part of $10 million to stand up initiative­s to promote the success of Black students. It will build off a slate of recommenda­tions laid out last June in the university system’s Black Student Success Report.

System-wide early outreach, culturally relevant curriculum and building the infrastruc­ture needed to support student success were among the proposals and could potentiall­y be put into action through the new California State University, Sacramento-based office.

The mission of the statewide hub, said CSU Chancellor Mildred García, is “not only to accelerate action and drive change across our 23 universiti­es, but, clearly demonstrat­e our institutio­n’s deep commitment to becoming a national leader in Black student success.”

Sacramento State campus is home to the largest Black student enrollment in the statewide system. Nearly 2,000 students who identify as Black or African American are enrolled at Sacramento State, representi­ng 6% of the total student population.

Black enrollment and achievemen­t have taken on greater urgency in the California State University, the nation’s largest four-year university system. CSU leaders launched Graduation Initiative 2025 to increase Black student enrollment and boost the numbers of students of color in the system but equity gaps persist.

Sacramento State President Luke Wood was a member of a working group that crafted the Black Student Success Report and recommenda­tions while he was a vice president at San Diego State University. The recommenda­tions by Wood and other leaders were seen as a call to action to reverse the enrollment slide.

A CSU statewide office selection committee, which included members from the original working group, chose Sacramento State for its “proven success in supporting Black students, staff and faculty, and addressing inequities and achievemen­t gaps within the Black student community.”

During Wood’s short time as university president, he has positioned the university as a leader in advancing Black students’ success. In February, Wood announced a first-in-the-nation Black Honors College to open this fall, with curriculum and instructio­n that focuses on the Black and African American experience and features specialize­d coursework and research opportunit­ies.

The university also recently launched the Sac State Black Success Initiative, with its goals to advance student achievemen­t, develop a task force of faculty, students, staff, alumni and donors, and increase recruitmen­t and retention among other targets.

In a statement announcing the new statewide office, Wood said the new office “acknowledg­es our work and success.”

“We know our success will be reflected and multiplied by the work that will be done here on behalf of the entire CSU,” Luke said.

 ?? BIBIANA ORTIZ Sacramento State ?? Sacramento State President Luke Wood meets with student leaders at the campus’ Martin Luther King Jr. Center during Wood’s tour on campus on July 18, 2023. More Black and African American students study at Sacramento State than at any campus in the 23-campus Cal State system, according to Wood.
BIBIANA ORTIZ Sacramento State Sacramento State President Luke Wood meets with student leaders at the campus’ Martin Luther King Jr. Center during Wood’s tour on campus on July 18, 2023. More Black and African American students study at Sacramento State than at any campus in the 23-campus Cal State system, according to Wood.

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