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Most Ivy Leagues are universities with secondary degrees. They are calculating these numbers from the graduate school education.
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No, they are not. These are undergraduate numbers, not aggregated across the graduate schools. The link explicitly states that it refers to completion of four-year college degrees:
http://www.jbhe.com/preview/winter07preview.html
Even if you believe that the JBHE is, for some mysterious reason, secretly including graduate school data for the Ivy Leagues, that would not explain why PWIs such as Amherst, Wellesley, Williams, Smith, Hamilton, and Swarthmore, all of which have no graduate programs, all have (much) higher black student graduation rates than the highest-peforming HBCU. Amherst is almost identical to Harvard on this measure.
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But based on the total population that the Ivies have and graduation rates they claim in this report do not correlate with the numbers I have read or calculated.
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OK, why don't you share the numbers you have read or calculated? What's your source?
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Yes, 8 out of 10 are graduating--but out a population of 100 where half drop out? That is an unfair correlation.
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What do you mean? This is the number of entering freshman who receive a bachelor's degree within 6 years. If you drop out, then you're counted as not graduating. How is that an "unfair correlation"?
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But when you make the comparison to non-Af Am students, it is a poorer prognosis for self-ID'ed AfAm students.
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JBHE addresses that issue in the article: it ranks PWIs not only by the black graduation rate, but by the differential between white and black graduation rates. Some PWIs, like Cornell, don't do as well on this measure, but 20 PWIs have a differential of 5 points or less. Mt Holyoke actually graduates its black students at a higher rate than its white students.
http://www.jbhe.com/features/50_blac...gradrates.html
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These rates are almost 10 years old. How are they significant today?
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No, the JBHE data is from 2005. I cited the PSU page solely to support my point that the NCAA and DOE data are one and the same.
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you dayum right I am not trusting anything these folks say at first glance.
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OK, then let's keep taking glances. Why is the Journal of Blacks in Higher Education "these folks" and therefore untrustworthy? What do you think their agenda is?
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I have young people coming to my office constantly crying as to the isolation they feel while attending these schools.
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That's a great reason for those students to attend HBCUs. There are many great reasons. But higher black graduation rates compared to PWIs is not one of them.