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by Zach Miners
Many colleges and universities place a premium on enrolling a racially diverse student body. But at most of these schools, their graduates might not be as varied as the students who entered as freshmen. Only about 40 percent of underrepresented minority students -- blacks, Latinos, and American Indians -- graduate from college within six years; the same statistic for nonminorities is 60 percent.
Experts say that much of the disparity in graduation rates can be attributed to the different economic backgrounds students bring when they enter college, a criterion in which minorities tend to be disadvantaged. This relationship between economic background and graduation rates is particularly significant for historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs), which generally enroll more students with limited financial resources.
The six-year graduation rates at even the top three black
colleges as ranked by U.S. News are 78 percent (
For comparison, the graduation rate for
Phyllis Collins, the school's director of academic enrichment, says the tools and information students receive in this course and its activities ease students' transition into college life and help keep them in school after what is usually a challenging first year. Shakima Kelly, a junior at DSU, agrees. "The academic programs definitely help in guiding students along all the way to graduation," she says.
At other black colleges, administrators say that cultivating high retention and graduation rates depends considerably upon the
admissions selectivity of the college and the socioeconomic profile of the student. "Those are essential predictors of eventual
graduation rates," says Howard's Thornton. For example, the average student who enrolls at
Money, of course, is a major issue. Debt can hurt a student's ability to pay for and remain in school, Thornton says, and that
holds true especially at HBCUs. "After sophomore year, making up that difference after institutional aid and federal Pell grants
can become unbearable," he says. A 2004 study conducted by the federal
At
At
But it's not just the HBCUs that are working hard to improve the graduation rates for blacks and other minority students.
GSU took a campuswide approach to improving graduation rates for all its students -- in 2002, its overall six-year graduation rate was 32 percent -- but administrators found that their programs were particularly effective for minority students. A combination of in-class academic advising, peer tutoring, and first-year learning communities -- where faculty members taught multiple courses and served as advisers to the same group of students -- helped to increase retention rates between freshman and sophomore years by about 6 percentage points. Those rates rose by 10 to 12 percentage points for minority students. The majority of GSU students are first-generation college students, and Renick says GSU's approach might have a greater effect on those students than on students who are more familiar with the college experience.
"
© U.S. News & World Report
Education: Colleges Take Action to Boost Minority Grad Rates | Zach Miners
© U.S. News & World Report