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The Future of Historically Black Colleges

Historically Black Colleges and Universities proliferated throughout the late 19th and early 20th centuries, when many white schools refused to admit African Americans, especially in the South. Our guest this week feels HBCUs still serve a crucial role in higher education.

July 15, 2015

The Future of Historically Black Colleges
Howard University graduation, 2015. Photo: Emily Hanford.
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Historically Black Colleges Today
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This fall we’ll be launching a new documentary about Historically Black Colleges and Universities, also known as HBCUs. They were established towards the end of the Civil War in an effort to educate newly freed slaves.  But after reaching peak enrollment in the 1990s, HBCUs began to lose students to predominantly white institutions, which at some schools led to a downsizing of faculty, student services, and program offerings.

Today there are 106 colleges designated by the federal government as HBCUs. Most of these are small, rural campuses in the Southeastern United States. They don’t usually make news. But our guest Jarrett Carter, founder of HBCUDigest.com, feels that in order for Americans to best understand race and inequality, the media must take a closer look at what happens at these historically black institutions. He recently spoke with ARW producer Samara Freemark about why he feels HBCUs serve a crucial role in higher education.

Jarrett Carter, founder of HBCUDigest.com. Photo: HBCUmoney.com

Jarrett Carter, founder of HBCUDigest.com. Photo: HBCUmoney.com

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