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Erica Eckert; Christopher Broadhurst – Journal of College and Character, 2024
Kent State University (KSU) has been associated with campus activism history since May 4, 1970. Using a case study approach, we interrogated if and how KSU student affairs administrators' approach to activism has changed in the intervening decades and how the legacy of the shootings informed their practice during the Black Lives Matters protests…
Descriptors: Universities, Student Personnel Workers, Activism, Student College Relationship
Sonu, Debbie; Deckman, Sherry L. – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2021
In this article, we draw from a larger qualitative study to examine how racial encounters are experienced for three non-Black members in a university-based historically-Black student organization. Using the idea of community-as-difference, we present three findings that break open assumptions about racial coexistence: the importance of being…
Descriptors: Minority Group Students, African American Organizations, Racial Relations, Sense of Community
Nicole Alison Phillips – ProQuest LLC, 2021
Narratives of isolation and marginalization are consistent elements of the experiences of Black people in higher education, regardless of positions and roles (Anthym & Tuitt, 2019; Chesler & Crowfoot, 1989; Stewart, 2018-2019). The purpose of this narrative study is to explore how participation in Black affinity groups influenced Black…
Descriptors: Student Personnel Workers, Predominantly White Institutions, Sense of Belonging, African Americans
Smith, Charles R., Jr. – ProQuest LLC, 2019
The retention of African-American male students at predominantly White institutions is an issue that continues to plague colleges and universities in the United States. African-American men have the lowest college graduation rate of any segment of the population. Pointedly, two-thirds of African-American male students who attend public four-year…
Descriptors: Fraternities, African American Students, Males, Academic Persistence
Hotchkins, Bryan K.; Smith, Patriann – Teachers College Record, 2020
Background/Context: Previous research suggested that first- or second-generation African immigrants comprised nearly a third of Black students attending selective U. S. colleges (Massey et al., 2007). While research frames the involvement of Black immigrant collegians as distinctly different from African American peers as it pertains to family…
Descriptors: College Students, First Generation College Students, African American Students, Blacks
Owens, L.; Njoku, N. – Frederick D. Patterson Research Institute, UNCF, 2021
Since 1837, Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) have secured a reputation for providing students, especially Black students, with a holistic college experience. An experience that embraces culture and leads to self-discovery, life-long personal and professional relationships, and most importantly, career opportunities. Today,…
Descriptors: Black Colleges, Culturally Relevant Education, African American Students, Success
Strayhorn, Terrell L. – New Directions for Student Services, 2019
This chapter presents a new model for fostering effective, collaborative partnerships between academic and student affairs at Minority-Serving Institutions, using an illustrative case study from a historically Black college/university (HBCU) located in Tennessee. After laying the context for collaborations in higher education, the author presents…
Descriptors: Career Education, Black Colleges, Partnerships in Education, Case Studies
Simmons, Lamont D. – Journal of College Student Retention: Research, Theory & Practice, 2019
In higher education, academic disparities exist between African American males and their gender and ethnic counterparts. Furthermore, many institutions struggle to promote African American male persistence beyond matriculation. This study provides insight into how a sample of undergraduate African American males was persisting at a predominantly…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, African American Students, Males, Academic Persistence
Rall, Raquel M.; Holman, Alea R. – School Community Journal, 2021
The authors investigated cultural resourcefulness among seven Black middle-class families who proactively collaborated to ensure their children's academic excellence in a highly racialized suburban community in southern California. Their children achieved high grades and successfully entered and completed higher education at elite U.S.…
Descriptors: Parent Participation, Parent Attitudes, Parent Influence, African American Attitudes
Delgado-Guerrero, Marla; Cherniack, Mayra A.; Gloria, Alberta M. – Journal of Diversity in Higher Education, 2014
This study sought to understand the reasons undergraduate women of color join a cultural-specific sorority. Through the use of an online survey, 159 narratives of women of color undergraduates attending predominately White institutions (PWIs) in the Midwest was conducted. LeCompte's (2000) 5-step analysis yielded four culturally focused…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Females, Sororities, African American Students
Henfield, Malik S.; Owens, Delila; Witherspoon, Sheila – Counselor Education and Supervision, 2011
The authors explored 11 African American doctoral students' perceptions of their experiences in counselor education programs, and their findings are presented. Using a phenomenological methodological framework, the authors investigated the various systems of support that students use as they navigate their respective programs. Human agency was the…
Descriptors: African American Students, Graduate Students, Counselor Training, Student Attitudes
White, Sherra' M. – ProQuest LLC, 2013
Even though the number of African American students has increased on college campuses, particularly Predominately White Institutions (PWIs), over the last century, they are less likely to graduate than their White counterparts are. They face discrimination, hostile environments, adversity, low or no social or mentoring support, and often feel…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Resilience (Psychology), College Students, African American Students
Azibo, Daudi Ajani ya – Journal of Negro Education, 2008
Undergraduates at a historically Black university completed the 1997 N'COBRA Reparations Survey. N'COBRA stands for the National Coalition of Blacks for Reparations in America. Five domains of reparations are covered: education, economic development, personal reparations (i.e., payments to individuals), political prisoners, and African-U.S.…
Descriptors: Racial Identification, Personality Measures, Student Surveys, Undergraduate Students
Jones, Ricky L. – SUNY Press, 2004
As a fraternity member, past chapter president, and former national committee representative, Ricky L. Jones is uniquely qualified to write about the sometimes deadly world of black fraternity hazing. Examining five major black Greek-letter fraternities, Jones maintains that hazing rituals within these fraternities are more deeply ingrained,…
Descriptors: Hazing, Fraternities, African American Organizations, Violence
Lomax, Michael L. – Journal of Higher Education Outreach and Engagement, 2006
For historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs), engagement is not an enhancement of their curriculum but part of their birthright. Founded in the Civil War/Reconstruction era, HBCUs had as their core mission educating freed slaves and other free black people to participate in the economy. Later, during the Jim Crow era, HBCUs educated…
Descriptors: Black Colleges, Higher Education, College Students, Learner Engagement
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