Hbcus by STATE

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Hbcus by STATE HBCUs by STATE Alabama Florida Alabama A&M University- Huntsville Bethune Cookman University- Daytona Alabama State University- Montgomery Beach Birmingham-Eastonian Baptist Bible Edward Waters College- Jacksonville College- Birmingham Florida A&M University- Tallahassee Gadsden State College- Gadsden Florida Memorial University- Miami J.F. Drake State Technical College- Gardens Huntsville Lawson State Community College- Georgia Birmingham Albany State University- Albany Miles College- Fairfield Carver College- Atlanta Miles School of Law- Fairfield Clark Atlanta University- Atlanta Oakwood University- Huntsville Fort Valley State University- Fort Valley Selma University- Selma Interdenominational Theological Center- Shelton State Community College- Atlanta Tuscaloosa Johnson C Smith Theological Seminary- Stillman College- Tuscaloosa Atlanta Talladega College- Talladega Morehouse College- Atlanta Tuskegee University- Tuskegee Morehouse School of Medicine- Atlanta H. Councill Trenholm State Community Morris Brown College- Atlanta College- Montgomery Paine College- Augusta Savannah State University- Savannah Arkansas Spelman College- Atlanta University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff Arkansas Baptist College- Little Rock Kentucky Philander Smith College- Little Rock Kentucky State University- Frankfort Shorter College- North Little Rock Simmons College of Kentucky- Louisville California Louisiana Charles Drew University of Medicine & Dillard University-New Orleans Science- Los Angeles Grambling State University- Grambling Southern University and A&M College- Delaware Baton Rouge Delaware State University- Dover Southern University New Orleans- New Orleans District of Columbia Southern University-Shreveport- Shreveport University of the District of Columbia Xavier University- New Orleans Howard University Maryland Bowie State University- Bowie Coppin State University- Baltimore University of Maryland- Eastern Shore- Princess Anne Morgan State University- Baltimore Source: The HUNDRED SEVEN HBCUs by STATE South Carolina Mississippi Allen University- Columbia Alcorn State University- Lorman Benedict College- Columbia Coahoma Community College- Clarksdale Claflin University- Orangeburg Hinds County Community College- Utica Clinton College- Rock Hill Jackson State University- Jackson Denmark Technical College- Denmark Mississippi Valley State University- Itta Morris College- Sumter Bena South Carolina State University- Rust College- Holly Springs Orangeburg Tougaloo College- Tougaloo Voorhees College- Denmark Missouri Tennessee Harris-Stowe State University- St. Louis American Baptist University- Nashville Lincoln University- Jefferson City Fisk University- Nashville Knoxville College**- Knoxville North Carolina Lane College- Jackson Barber-Scotia College**- Concord LeMoyne Owen College- Memphis Bennett College- Greensboro Meharry Medical College Elizabeth City State University- Elizabeth Tennessee State University- Nashville City Fayetteville State University- Fayetteville Texas Hood Theological Seminary*- Salisbury Huston-Tillotson University- Austin Johnson C. Smith University- Charlotte Jarvis Christian College- Hawkins Livingstone College- Salisbury Paul Quinn College- Dallas North Carolina Central University- Durham Prairie View A&M University- Prairie View North Carolina A&T State University- Southwestern Christian College- Terrell Greensboro St. Philip's College- San Antonio Shaw University- Raleigh Texas College- Tyler St. Augustine's University- Raleigh Texas Southern University- Houston Winston-Salem State University- Winston Wiley College- Marshall Salem US Virgin Islands Ohio University of the Virgin Islands- St. Thomas Central State University- Wilberforce & St. Croix Payne Theological Seminary*- Wilberforce Wilberforce University- Wilberforce Virginia Hampton University- Hampton Oklahoma Norfolk State University- Norfolk Langston University- Langston Virginia State University- Petersburg Virginia Union University- Richmond Pennsylvania Virginia University of Lynchburg- Cheyney University- Cheyney The Lincoln University West Virginia Bluefield State College- Bluefield West Virginia State University- Institute SUBSCR Source: The HUNDRED SEVEN .
Recommended publications
  • North Carolina's Historically Black Colleges and Universities (Hbcus)
    Published on NCpedia (https://ncpedia.org) Home > North Carolina's Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) North Carolina's Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) [1] Share it now! North Carolina's Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) Prior to the conclusion of the Civil War in 1865, the majority of African Americans in the United States were enslaved persons living in the southern states. Education for African Americans was sparse, especially in the South with laws such as North Carolina's that prohibited teaching enslaved persons to read and write. It was a rare occurrence for an African American to be literate. While there were a few schools dedicated to African American education in the North prior to the Civil War, the first college available to African Americans in the South was Shaw University, which opened its doors in 1865. A number of institutions dedicated specifically for the education of African Americans were founded in the era immediately following the Civil War and others followed when segregation limited equal access to education. These schools are often known as Historically Black Colleges and Universities, or "HBCUs". North Carolina has twelve historically black colleges and universities, including the oldest in the South, Raleigh's Shaw University, founded in 1865, and North Carolina's newest HBCU, North Carolina Central University, founded in 1910 in Durham. Ten of these schools continue to operate today. Click here for an interactive timeline of the history of North Carolina's HBCUs [2] Click on the images below for NCpedia articles on North Carolina's HBCUs Shaw [3]Fayetteville State [4]Barber-Scotia [5] Johnson C.
    [Show full text]
  • MSEA Aspiring Educator Chapter Who We Are?
    MSEA Aspiring Educator Chapter Who we are? MSEA’s Aspiring Educator (AE) program works with college students from across MD who are preparing to be educators. MSEA represents 74,000 public school employees in the state of Maryland. AE members represent private four-year institutions, to public four years, Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) and community colleges. Mission: There are many challenges as an educator; starting with graduating from a certification and into a classroom full-time. Here in MD we lose 47% of our teachers within the first five years of teaching. MSEA has identified recruiting and retaining quality teachers as a priority for our public schools. That is why MSEA developed the AE program. Where are we? Current Chapters: 1. Bowie State University 2. Community College of Baltimore County 3. Coppin State University 4. Frostburg State University 5. Frostburg State University – Hagerstown 6. University of Maryland – College Park Probationary Chapters: 1. Hood College 2. Morgan State University 3. Notre Dame of Maryland University 4. University of Maryland Baltimore County To be an affiliated chapter in good standing, the elected officers of the club (at least the President, Vice President, and Treasurer or Secretary) must be dues paying members of the current membership year. What do MSEA AE chapters do? MSEA’s AE program works in three core areas, both on campus and at the state and national levels. Professional Development There is a lot to master before completing a certificate program and being ready for the diverse and challenging classrooms that educators will face. MSEA provides trainings, and resources on cutting edge professional development topics.
    [Show full text]
  • Survival of the the Fittest? the Rebranding of WV Higher Education
    SURVIVAL OF THE FITTEST? THE REBRANDING OF WEST VIRGINIA HIGHER EDUCATION EXCERPT: CHAPTER ONE: REBRANDING -- AN INTRODUCTION James Martin Owston, EdD Marshall University College of Education and Human Services Dissertation submitted to the Faculty of the Marshall University Graduate College in partial fulfillment of the requirement for the degree of Doctor of Education in Educational Leadership Committee Chair, Barbara L. Nicholson, PhD Powell E. Toth, PhD H. Keith Spears, EdD Charles H. Polk, EdD Huntington, West Virginia, 2007 Keywords: Higher education, rebranding, brand identity, college-to-university Copyright 2007 by James Martin Owston SURVIVAL OF THE FITTEST? THE REBRANDING OF WEST VIRGINIA HIGHER EDUCATION CHAPTER ONE: REBRANDING -- AN INTRODUCTION We do what we must, and call it by the best names. – Ralph Waldo Emerson (n.d.). Your premium brand had better be delivering something special, or it's not going to get the business – Warren Buffet (n.d.). In an April 2006 editorial, New York Times columnist Stephan Budiansky recounted his research for a satirical novel set on the campus of a university. “The idea was to have a bunch of gags about how colleges prostitute themselves to improve their U.S. News & World Reports’ rankings and keep up a healthy supply of tuition-paying students while wrapping their craven commercialism in high-minded sounding academic blather.” Budiansky continued, “One of my best bits, or so I thought, was about how the fictional university . had hired a branding consultant to come up with a new name with the hip, possibility-rich freshness needed to appeal to today’s students. Two weeks later, a friend called to say it was on the front page of The Times: ‘To Woo Students, Colleges Choose Names That Sell’” (p.
    [Show full text]
  • Academic Catalog: 2012-2014
    Welcome to Bluefield State College! We’re delighted you have chosen to pursue your professional and personal goals with us. Our dedicated faculty and staff are committed to your success, and we look forward to sharing your journey along the path to a rewarding future. You will discover a variety of exciting programs in Bluefield State’s Schools of Arts and Sciences, Business, Education, Engineering Technology and Computer Sciences, and Nursing and Allied Health. This includes four programs (Business Administration, RN to BSN, Radiologic Sciences, and Regents Bachelor of Arts) that you can complete entirely on-line. In addition, you can continue to build your leadership skills by participating in athletics, robotics competitions, international business simulation competitions, Model United Nations, or one of our many service and social organizations. You will be joining an energetic, talented student body whose members attend classes in Bluefield, in Beckley, and on-line. Bluefield State’s core values are excellence, community, diversity, and growth. We pledge that you will receive an outstanding education in a caring environment that helps you grow intellectually, personally, professionally, and culturally. Bluefield State is committed to serving you in a manner that challenges you to learn and achieve while supporting and strengthening your ability and capacity to do great things. We’ll prepare you to be a 21st century leader who will make a difference in your community – and in the state, nation, and world. Thank you for entrusting your future to Bluefield State College. I am pleased to welcome you to campus and look forward to meeting you personally.
    [Show full text]
  • THE AURORA "Let There Be Light"
    KNOXVILLE COLLEGE FOUNDED 1875 THE AURORA "Let there Be Light" PUBLISHED Six TIMES A YEAR BY KNOXVILLE COLLEGE Vol. 72 KNOXVILLE COLLEGE, KNOXVILLE, TENN., DECEMBER, 1958 No,'2 ^i tm*iMMMjii*i*wti#i»wtiii#]jitii«i«nt# BULLETIN A fire which originated in a trash chute routed the residents of Wallace Hall, a dormitory for junior and senior women, ••••• Monday, December 8, shortly after nine o'clock. Damage was ••••• extensive enough to cause the removal of the group to the al­ ••••• ready crowded Elnathan Hall until > plans can he made con­ cerning the handling of the Mrs. Colston Dr. Colston 4*- growing problems of space. .o ••••• Dormitories for both wo­ ••••• ••••• men and men are presently ••••• ••••• under construction and are Wmti % £jririt of % (Elrmt Glpli scheduled to be ready for oc­ ••••• ••••• cupancy by early spring. ••••4&• 4S* 1 * I ?-fF k -Jr •**- ••••• K. C.'s Choice—First Row: Jackie Roberts, Rosemary Martin, Elaine ••••• '58 Grad Given tk Wood. Second Row: Jamesena Boyd, Shirley Lewis, Ann Vinson, Jeff ••••• N. Y. C. Post Owens; and third row: Garmon Moore, Richard Jackson, and Anthony 48* Blackburn. —Photo by Walls ••••• 48* 48* • ••«• ••••• Knoxville College Chooses Ten ••••48*• ••••• 43* 4••••»• Representatives For Who's Who ®l|e (ttdfefam*, karoos, pitlfydhttma, Heart fS- BY DESSA BLAIR Knoxville College chose ten outstanding personalities for the list ••••• 48* of who's who among students in American universities and colleges. 4* attfr |Happg ••••• The five students renamed for the school year 1958-1959 were: 48* Richard Jackson, Anthony Blackburn, Rosemary Martin, Jamesena Boyd and Elaine Wood. Richard Jackson, a senior, is member of the concert choir, NEA, endowed with great leadership Panhellenic Council, the Council qualities.
    [Show full text]
  • Colleges in Texas
    Colleges in Texas § Abilene Christian University § Texas A&M University System § Amberton University o College Station § American College of Acupuncture & Oriental o Commerce Medicine o Corpus Christi § AOMA Graduate School of Integrative Medicine o Galveston § Arlington Baptist College o Health Science Center § Art Institute of Dallas o Kingsville § Art Institute of Houston o Prairie View A&M University § Austin College o Tarleton State University Texarkana § Austin Graduate School of Theology o o Texas A&M International University § Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary o West Texas A&M University § Baptist Missionary Association Theological § Texas Chiropractic College Seminary § Texas Christian University § Baylor College of Medicine § Texas College § Baylor University § Texas Lutheran University § Brite Divinity School § Texas Southern University § College of Saints John Fisher & Thomas More § Texas State University System § Concordia University–Texas o Lamar University § Criswell College o Sam Houston State University § Dallas Baptist University o Sul Ross State University § Dallas Christian College o Texas State University–San Marcos § Dallas Theological Seminary § Texas Tech University System § DeVry University–Irving (Dallas) o Angelo State University § East Texas Baptist University o Health Sciences Center § Graduate Institute of Applied Linguistics o Texas Tech University § Hardin-Simmons University § Texas Wesleyan University § Houston Baptist University § Texas Woman's University § Howard Payne University § Trinity University
    [Show full text]
  • ED347887.Pdf
    DOCUMENT RESUME ED 347 887 HE 025 650 AUTHOR Gill, Wanda E. TITLE The History of Maryland's Historically Black Colleges. PUB DATE 92 NOTE 57p. PUB TYPE Historical MatPrials (060) EDRS PRICE MF01/PC03 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS *Black Colleges; Black History; Black Students; *Educational History; Higher Education; Racial Bias; Racial Segregation; School Desegregation; State Colleges; State Legislation; State Universities; Whites IDENTIFIERS *African Americans; Bowie State College MD; Coppin State College MD; *Maryland; Morgan State University MD; University of Maryland Eastern Shore ABSTRACT This paper presents a history of four historically Black colleges in Maryland: Bowie State University, Coppin State College, Morgan State University, and the University of Maryland, Eastern Shore. The history begins with a section on the education of Blacks before 1800, a period in which there is little evidence of formal education for African Americans despite the presence of relatively large numbers of free Blacks thronghout the state. A section on the education of Blacks from 1800 to 1900 describes the first formal education of Blacks, the founding of the first Black Catholic order of nuns, and the beginning of higher education in the state after the Civil War. There follow sections on each of the four historically Black institutions in Maryland covering the founding and development of each, and their responses to social changes in the 1950s and 1960s. A further chapter describes the development and manipulation of the Out of State Scholarship Fund which was established to fund Black students who wished to attend out of state institutions for courses offered at the College Park, Maryland campus and other White campuses from which they were barred.
    [Show full text]
  • Schools Contacted by Taking Action
    SchoolsContactedbytakingaction EndAnimalSufferinginExperimentsatuniversities ALABAMA Alabama State University Auburn University Tuskegee University University of Alabama University of Alabama, Birmingham University of South Alabama ALASKA University of Alaska ARIZONA Arizona State University Midwestern University Northern Arizona University University of Arizona ARKANSAS Hendrix College University of Arkansas University of Arkansas, Little Rock CALIFORNIA California State Polytechnic University, Pomona California State University, East Bay California State University, Fullerton California State University, Long Beach California State University, Los Angeles California State University, Northridge California State University, San Marcos Loma Linda University Loyola Marymount University Mount St. Mary's College Occidental College Pomona College San Diego State University San Francisco State University Santa Clara University Stanford University Touro University University of California, Berkeley University of California, Davis University of California, Irvine University of California, Los Angeles University of California, Riverside University of California, San Diego University of California, San Francisco 1 University of California, Santa Barbara University of California, Santa Cruz University of San Diego University of Southern California University of the Pacific COLORADO Regis University University of Colorado, Boulder University of Colorado, Denver University of Denver University of Northern
    [Show full text]
  • As the Tenth President of Morris College
    THE INVESTITURE OF DR. LEROY STAGGERS AS THE TENTH PRESIDENT OF MORRIS COLLEGE Friday, the Twelfth of April Two Thousand and Nineteen Neal-Jones Fine Arts Center Sumter, South Carolina The Investiture of DR. LEROY STAGGERS as the Tenth President of Morris College Friday, the Twelfth of April Two Thousand and Nineteen Eleven O’clock in the Morning Neal-Jones Fine Arts Center Sumter, South Carolina Dr. Leroy Staggers was named the tenth president of Morris College on July 1, 2018. He has been a part of the Morris College family for twenty- five years. Dr. Staggers joined the faculty of Morris College in 1993 as an Associate Professor of English and was later appointed Chairman of the Division of Religion and Humanities and Director of Faculty Development. For sixteen years, he served as Academic Dean and Professor of English. As Academic Dean, Dr. Staggers worked on all aspects of Morris College’s on-going reaffirmation of institutional accreditation, including the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges (SACSCOC). In addition to his administrative responsibilities, Dr. Staggers remains committed to teaching. He frequently teaches English courses and enjoys working with students in the classroom, directly contributing to their intellectual growth and development. Prior to coming to Morris College, Dr. Staggers served as Vice President for Academic Affairs, Associate Professor of English, and Director of Faculty Development at Barber-Scotia College in Concord, North Carolina. His additional higher education experience includes Chairman of the Division of Humanities and Assistant Professor of English at Voorhees College in Denmark, South Carolina, and Instructor of English and Reading at Alabama State University in Montgomery, Alabama.
    [Show full text]
  • Student Handbook
    JARVIS CHRISTIAN COLLEGE STUDENT HANDBOOK Revised June 1, 2020 Dr. Lester C. Newman President Dr. Charles N. Smith Vice President for Student Services ACCREDITATION STATUS Jarvis Christian College is accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges to award baccalaureate degrees. Contact the Commission on Colleges at 1866 Southern Lane, Decatur, Georgia 30033-4097 or call 404-679-4500 for questions about the accreditation of Jarvis Christian College. The Commission is to be contacted only if there is evidence that appears to support non- compliance with the College’s significant requirements or standards. Normal inquiries about Jarvis Christian College, such as admission requirements, financial aid, educational programs, etc., should be addressed directly to the College and not to the Commission’s office. FOUNDED BY THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH (DISCIPLES OF CHRIST) AFFILIATED With DIVISION OF HIGHER EDUCATION: CHRISTIAN CHURCH (DISCIPLES OF CHRIST), INC. CHRISTIAN CHURCH (DISCIPLES OF CHRIST) IN THE SOUTHWEST CHRISTIAN CHURCH (DISCIPLES OF CHRIST) IN OKLAHOMA CHRISTIAN CHURCH (DISCIPLES OF CHRIST) IN ARKANSAS APPROVED By TEXAS EDUCATION AGENCY TEXAS ASSOCIATION OF COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES MEMBER Of SOUTHERN ASSOCIATION OF COLLEGES AND SCHOOLS INDEPENDENT COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES OF TEXAS AMERICAN COUNCIL OF EDUCATION NATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR EQUAL OPPORTUNITY IN HIGHER EDUCATION TEXAS ASSOCIATION OF DEVELOPING COLLEGES THE COLLEGE FUND/UNCF NATIONAL COUNCIL OF EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITIES ASSOCIATION NATIONAL
    [Show full text]
  • Volume 2 Issue 1 – 2013
    American Association of Blacks in Higher Education LEADERSHIP & MENTORING INSTITUTE “The Next Phase of Academic Leadership” Volume 2, Issue 1 February 2013 LMI Celebrates 10 Years “A Decade of Preparing Leaders for the Next Phase of Academic Leadership" It has been 10 years since the workshops the Caucus sought a “I was truly delighted to serve as way to address this issue. The the first director of the AABHE inaugural Leadership and Caucus wanted to provide an Leadership and Mentoring Institute Mentoring Institute (LMI) was held experience to mitigate the effect of (LMI)” says Silver. He noted, “The at Savannah State University in the glass ceiling in higher education primary driving force leading to the July 2003. Today, more than 212 for African Americans. establishment of the LMI was the higher education administrators and Under the leadership of founding recognition of the dearth of African- faculty members, representing 85 director, Dr. Joseph H. Silver, Sr., American faculty and staff who had institutions, have completed the currently the Managing Partner at achieved senior status in the faculty Institute. Silver and Associates, LMI began ranks and in administrative The concept of the Institute was the task of helping African positions in colleges and universities initiated in the fall of 1996 by Americans become acquainted with across the country. Rather, than members of the Black Caucus of the the issues and challenges they must continue to talk about the problem, former American Association of overcome in order to be considered we made a conscious decision to Higher Education (AAHE). for senior-level administrative address the problem.” Concerned with the decline in positions or gain tenure and move professional development up the academic ranks.
    [Show full text]
  • 2020 Sc Stem Signing Day Honorees
    2020 SC STEM SIGNING DAY HONOREES COUNTY STUDENT CURRENT SCHOOL COLLEGE PROGRAM OF STUDY Abbeville Dawson Glenn Dixie High Presbyterian College Physics Abbeville Steve “Matthew” Howard Abbeville High University of South Carolina Electrical Engineering Aiken Matthew Ketusky Silver Bluff High Charleston Southern University Computer Science Aiken Cecilia Rhoades Aiken High NC A&T or Tuskegee Chemical Engineering Allendale Jazmine Miranda Allendale Fairfax High Midlands Technical College Dental Hygiene Allendale Javarius Youmans Allendale Fairfax High North Greenville University Mathematics & Computer Engineering Anderson Jack Heeney T L Hanna High University of Alabama Mechanical Engineering Bamberg Shaniya Moody Denmark Olar High USC or Denmark Technical Nursing Bamberg Jaela Tyler Denmark Olar High Clemson University Animal & Veterinary Science Barnwell Jonathan John Barnwell High Midlands Technical College Mechanical & Architectural Engineering Barnwell Sai Durga Rithvik Oruganti Barnwell High University of South Carolina Computer Engineering Beaufort Lawren Caldwell Whale Branch Early College High North Carolina A&T State University Environmental Science Beaufort Marjorie “Hope” Locke Battery Creek High USC - Beaufort Nursing Berkeley Devin Lawson Goose Creek High Undecided Welding/Engineering Berkeley William Wilson Stratford High University of South Carolina Aerospace Engineering Calhoun Mckenzie Golden Calhoun County High Orangeburg Calhoun Technical College Welding Calhoun Johnathon Keller Calhoun County High FMU, Winthrop, SC State,
    [Show full text]