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As far as the AUC (Atlanta University Center - Clark Atlanta, Spelman, Morehouse, Morris Brown, ITC, Morehouse School of Medicine), we had the AUC Career Center. I mean it was off the charts. The center helped you get your resume together, set up mock interviews, helped you research your career field, etc. There would be tons of companies that would come there to inteview for internships and full time positions. All you had to do was be registered with your school rep at the Center. You could then come in the Center weekly or even daily and thumb through, for example, the accounting/finance binder which listed all the companies coming to interview for the week and what days and times were available. I'm not sure if a lot of non-HBCUs have this but the people I know that attended non-HBCUs didn't know of such a thing (or maybe they were just too shiftless to find out about it :p).
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PROUD HBCU GRAD!
From day one you are told you are responsible for the future of our community. You sit next to future doctors, lawyers, politicians, entrepreneurs, and it makes you feel good. The support system is incredible. No matter where you are from, there is a crowd where you will fit in perfectly. Your history never begins with ...black folks were slaves. WE WERE QUEENS, KINGS...ROYALTY.
I could go on and on about my classmates and my own wonderful experience being a product of Howard University...THE MECCA! But, you have already read about us in all of the current pop culture and trade magazines. Those who are quick to dismiss black colleges for fear of receiving an inferior education suffer miserably from self hate. These are the same people who would prefer a white doctor to a black doctor...just because. A sad state of affairs! Singing..."I'm so glad...I went to Howard U!!!!!" P.S. My future children will go to Howard!;) |
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Sphinxpoet :cool: |
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I certainly agree - - - enough said!
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Re: HBCU vs. White Schools
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I go to a predominantly white university and I always feel like I'm missing something. I'm not sure what... just something. However, I do feel like the black students on campus are closer since there are few of us. Seeing familiar faces all the time makes it easier for us to look out for each other.
Has anyone transferred from a PWU to an HBCU or vice versa? I'm interested to hear what you think. |
I don’t want to get too lengthy so I’ll try to keep this short.My situation is an interesting one.
I was born in the south side of Chicago (predom. black), grew up in San Francisco (very diverse) and attended Jr College, transferred to Grambling (GSU rocks the HOUSE!): D then transferred back home to Jr college then to San Francisco State (yuck!), back to Jr. College, (change major & got AA degree) then applied to another HBCU (Howard) but never heard ANYTHING from them (don't ask how many times I called) so I transferred to an art school (where I am now & very diverse) but will apply to Howard for grad school. Whew! What a mouthful! Anyway, my experience at Grambling was mind-blowing. At the time I wasn't mature enough to handle myself (bad grades) but what I took from the experience changed my life and views. GSU's motto is "Everybody is Somebody". I am SOMEBODY. Deep in my heart I knew that but at GSU , I FELT IT. One of my teachers made me stand up in front of a mirror and SAY IT and MEAN IT. I really cannot put into words the feelings that I have right now as I type this. I can say that the experience is like no other. If I ever have children, I will STRONGLY ENCOURAGE them/he/she to attend a HBCU. I've already picked them out: Howard, Spelman or Morehouse, Meharry Medical or Howard Medical, Grambling, and Tuskegee. The only non-HBCU on the list is Oberlin. |
Historically Black and Proud
I attend an HBCU and I absolutely love it. I am having the time of my life and receiving a great education. I could not see myself in school anywhere else.
I went to an all-white elementary school. My middle school and high school were about 50% white and 50% everything else. I liked that experience. But, when it came time to pick a college, I knew I wanted to attend an HBCU. The environment that I grew up in was not full of positive and upwardly mobile young black people. Sure, I knew professional blacks, but they were all my mother's age. Everyone that I knew and went to school with was doing absolutely nothing with themselves and had even less planned for their futures. The few black students like myself were so stuck-up and "corny" that I couldn't stand to be arond them. There was nobody like me, smart and ambitious, but still cool. I wanted to surround myself with positive black people and I knew that attending a black college would be my last opportunity to do so. I wasn't sold on my school until I had actually visited the campus. I had narrowed my choices down to UNC, Spelman, and FAMU. Compared to the other two, FAM had the friendliest campus. It was just a family atmosphere. When my mother and I got lost looking for a building, someone walked us to exactly where we need to be. At UNC and Spelman, people barely wanted to point us in the right direction. I still feel the family atmosphere here after some years. I am still friends with everyone who lived on my hallway my freshman year. My friends will tell me that I know I need to go to class. It's like everyone here wants you to succeed. The most successful people in my family attended HBCUs. My grandparents went to Tuskegee, my parents went to Lincoln (PA), and my sister went to Hampton. These are not the only college educated people in my family, but the ones who attended majority institutions have yet to reach a moderate level of success. I have a cousin who went to Princeton who can barely hold a job, and she has an MBA. It's my mother's opinion that she should have attended and HBCU because she needs that nurturing that a black college can provide. The one thing that I don't like is the negative connotation that goes along with attending a black college. People think that I go to FAM because it's the only school I could get into. I got accepted to every school that I applied to and those are some of the best colleges in this country. I could have gone to NYU or Georgetown, but I wanted to go to FAMU!!!! |
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I also know of a lot of really, really smart students from my high school that were accepted to predom. white schools (some with scholarships), but chose an HBCU (FAMU, Howard, Spelman, and Hampton). So, it's definitely a myth that you attend a HBCU because you can't get in anywhere else. However, how do you feel about those students that attend an HBCU because they didn't get into any other college? The ones that I've known usually withdrew, including a cousin of mine. I know how hard she had it in high school, but she really wanted a college degree. I'm glad a school gave her the opportunity to at least try. Our entire family was really supportive and encouraged her to stick with it, but she couldn't. :( My question is do stories like that help or hurt? |
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I answering Dexter's question, I agree with Soror Ideal08. I think it depends on what your background is. |
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I would venture to say reasons for not finishing are typically very personal. Many reasons are financial. While some students do not return simply because "college life"...academia...simply was not the right choice for them. |
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If someone drops out of school, then maybe they just don't need to be there. I think that many students come to school expecting the school to tell them what they should be. If you don't already has some kind of grasp around who you are or what you want to be in life, it doesn't matter what school you go to. A university cannot tell you what to study or what to pursue. |
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