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Offline klg14

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Only 15% Appiled to Morehouse College
« on: April 16, 2013, 06:44:55 PM »
"There were 20,000 African-American male high-school graduates last year with admissions profiles best-suited for Morehouse College," Mr. Wilson says. "We got less than 15 percent of them to apply."

http://chronicle.com/article/A-New-President-Seeks-to-Move/138519/

April 15, 2013

Morehouse College's Leader Seeks to Reverse Decline

By Eric Kelderman

Walking across the campus of his alma mater, Morehouse College, President John S. Wilson Jr. points out buildings named for famous alumni and leaders of the civil-rights movement.

The building that used to be called Thurman Hall, where Mr. Wilson lived as a freshman in 1975, was named for the influential 20th-century theologian, Howard Thurman. Du Bois Hall, where Mr. Wilson lived his sophomore through senior years, is named for W.E.B. Du Bois. King Chapel is named for the college's best-known alumnus, Martin Luther King Jr.

The names on the buildings represent the people and ideals that students seek to model their lives on, says Mr. Wilson, who became president of the all-male, historically black college in January. He chose to live in Du Bois Hall, he says, because he wanted to emulate the great scholar, a graduate of Fisk University, another black college, who advocated for higher education for African-Americans as a way to lift them out of poverty and erase the damages of slavery in the United States.

"These guys lived lives that were worthy of being on a building," says Mr. Wilson.

Now, the leadership and inspiration that led to the formation and growth of black colleges during the 19th and 20th centuries needs to take a new form, he says: What students at Morehouse need is someone who will step up and donate the money to build a new building, or endow a scholarship fund.

Improving the fund-raising operation is just one of the ways that Morehouse can "make a surge to a new echelon," says Mr. Wilson, who was previously director of the White House Initiative on Historically Black Colleges and Universities. "Being president allows me the chance to shift Morehouse from needy to nimble," he says. "The strongest are nimble."

Mr. Wilson's efforts will be closely watched by other black colleges, where the promise of change has come a lot easier than the process. Raising money to improve campus buildings and equipment, for example, has been a major hurdle, even for the best-known historically black colleges, like Morehouse.

A deeper challenge will be to reverse a decline in enrollment that has not only compounded the financial struggles of those institutions but also undermined their reputation as the best places for high-achieving black students.

"My goal is to see the place that I imagined as a student," Mr. Wilson says. "I imagine a great Morehouse—an awesome place."

The nation's 105 historically black colleges are credited with successfully lifting freed slaves and their descendants out of illiteracy after the Civil War and helping to create a black middle class as the 20th century matured.

Even as traditionally white colleges were integrating by the mid-1970s, black colleges remained vital as places for African-American students to succeed and become empowered by the supportive environment and cultural identity.

Mr. Wilson, who attended an integrated high school in Philadelphia, says Morehouse appealed to him, in part, because there he would not feel like "the other," he says.

The strong cultural connections and nurturing environment are still a draw for many who attend historically black colleges. Anré Washington, a senior and student-government president at Morehouse, says the college was the only one he applied to, because of its "history, what it stood for, what it taught young men to be."

But a dwindling percentage of young African-Americans are making the choice that Mr. Washington made.

Enrollment of black students at black colleges has steadily declined as a percentage of black students over all. Just 11 percent of all black students now choose black colleges as other sectors of higher education have aggressively sought to diversify their campuses. While black colleges still award more than 20 percent of the undergraduate degrees earned by black students, two for-profit institutions, the University of Phoenix and Ashford University, now lead the nation in the overall numbers of bachelor's degrees awarded to African-Americans.

The students that many black colleges are losing to predominantly white colleges are often the top academic performers, says Phillip L. Clay, a professor of city planning and former chancellor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a friend and former colleague of Mr. Wilson's.

As a result, a greater share of the students attending black colleges are underprepared, making for lower retention and graduation rates, Mr. Clay writes in a study of black colleges he did while serving as a senior fellow at the Ford Foundation.

Some historically black colleges have responded to declining enrollment by lowering admissions standards, but many don't have the money to help underprepared students succeed academically, says Kassie Freeman, a former vice president for academic and student affairs for the Southern University system, based in Baton Rouge, La. Struggling students cost more to educate, because they need more academic advising and tutoring, for example.

Financial viability has long been a challenge for historically black colleges, which have primarily served low-income students. In addition, they have had a lower percentage of alumni support, between 5 percent and 11 percent, compared with predominantly white colleges, where on average more than 20 percent of alumni are donors.

The median amount of total cash and investments for the more than 500 col­leges rated by Moody's Investors Service was more than $200-million in 2011, compared with a median amount of $49-million for the 18 historically black colleges Moody's rates.

The recent economic downturn has put an added strain on many black colleges, where an above-average number of students and families are unable to afford the tuition increases that could bolster the colleges' bottom lines.

Morehouse's academic performance is far above average compared with most historically black colleges, but it has significant financial challenges. Since the fall of 2007, Morehouse's enrollment has dropped nearly 16 percent, to about 2,300 students, according to a December report from Moody's, despite a goal of increasing enrollment to 2,600. Morehouse's endowment is about $140-million, but the small private colleges that Mr. Wilson wants Morehouse to be compared with all have more than a billion in the bank.

In the fall of 2012, only a third of the students Morehouse accepted enrolled, compared with nearly half of those accepted in 2008, according to Moody's.

The college took another big hit in the fall when more than 100 Morehouse students chose not to attend after their parents were denied federal Parent PLUS Loans because of tighter lending standards.


Mr. Wilson says he has been contemplating how to improve the college since he was a student here. "I used to call my sister at Swarthmore and ask her about the way it was run," he says.

Those comparisons were partly the basis for an essay Mr. Wilson wrote at the time for the student newspaper that he titled "Disturbed About Morehouse." The title echoed the name of a book, Disturbed About Man, written by Morehouse's president emeritus, Benjamin E. Mays.

In the essay, Mr. Wilson says he raised issues "like our need to be more selective, the high attrition rate, the obvious apathy of too many students, and the need for more of an emphasis on developing character as a central part of the Morehouse experience." As a student, Mr. Wilson told the former president that he "loved Morehouse, but he didn't always like it."

Mr. Mays challenged him to get some experience and then come back to try to improve the college, Mr. Wilson says.

He did just that, earning a master of theological studies from Harvard University, and both a master's and a doctorate in administration, planning, and social policy, from Harvard.

He worked for 16 years at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, becoming director of foundation relations and assistant provost, and overseeing two capital campaigns that raised a total of $2.7-billion.

After moving to the Washington, D.C., area, he became an associate professor of higher education at George Washington University, served as executive dean of the university's Virginia campus, and helped to develop a strategic plan for the institution.

Mr. Wilson lists the characteristics of selective liberal-arts colleges, like Amherst, Grinnell, and Swarthmore, that Morehouse should aspire to, including a healthy endowment, competitive faculty salaries, a brand that attracts an appropriate caliber of student, and a state-of-the-art educational environment.

The key to improving those aspects of Morehouse lies in enhancing the use of technology in all aspects of campus operations and becoming "data driven," Mr. Wilson says, especially to streamline student-support services. In a January interview on NPR, Mr. Wilson explained that many alumni of black colleges feel a kind of "nausea" about the poor customer service from the financial-aid office or the registrar.

Data-driven efficiency and the use of best practices are not new in higher education, and Mr. Wilson is one of a cadre of new leaders seeking to raise the stature and financial viability of historically black colleges through such methods. "Historically black colleges can and should be among the best in class among American universities," he says.

Other presidents who are seen as leading this movement include Walter M. Kimbrough, president of Dillard University, M. Christopher Brown II at Alcorn State University, and David J. Wilson of Morgan State University.

Their reform message has received a mixed reception.

Mr. Kimbrough became president of Dillard in 2011 after seven years of rehabilitating the struggling Philander Smith College, in Arkansas­—his first job as a college president. Mr. Kimbrough was popular with Philander Smith students because of his youthful demeanor and engaging personality, and he was successful at turning the college around by focusing on the academic performance of the institution, including measures to improve retention and graduation rates, raise faculty salaries, and increase the percentage of alumni giving.

David J. Wilson, president of Morgan State University, in Baltimore, has not enjoyed the same smooth sailing. Following a president who served for more than a quarter century, Mr. Wilson was just three years into his tenure when Morgan State's Board of Regents tried to oust him.

David Wilson's agenda for Morgan State has included an effort to raise admissions standards and increase the amount of sponsored research that faculty members are awarded, particularly in the sciences. To facilitate that, Mr. Wilson created a new vice presidency for research and economic development.

But the chairman of the board, Dallas R. Evans, blamed the president for hiring new administrators rather than "allocate additional positions for faculty, who teach our students, write grants, conduct research, and do community outreach."

The chairman was later ousted from his position. Morgan State's board eventually reversed its decision and offered Mr. Wilson a one-year contract extension.

MIT's Phillip Clay, in his study of black colleges, writes about how a culture of a nurturing family environment—among the hallmarks of the institutions—can lead to a paternalistic style of leadership that discourages innovation within the college, expects students to endure poor services, and fosters an insularity that rejects advice or collaboration from outside the college.

David Wilson agrees that some historically black colleges cling to the way things have always been done. "If you have been living in a matchbox for a long time, and you pretty much have been conditioned not to think of things beyond the matchbox, and if someone removes it, you may think it still represents the parameters of what you can and cannot do," he says.

John Wilson has few specific plans so far. His first few weeks were consumed with relocating and getting settled in the middle of the academic year­—a visit to his office in February revealed bookshelves only half filled. And he'd had to deal with the February 1 shooting of a Morehouse student after a basketball game on campus. The victim was injured but expected to recover fully.

Yet Mr. Wilson carefully spells out the four main areas he wants to focus on: improved fund raising, more efficient and effective administrative operations, more campus activities for students, and improving Morehouse's image both locally and nationally.

The college will also need a more intensive student-recruitment effort to reverse enrollment declines while, simultaneously, becoming more selective in admissions.

"There were 20,000 African-American male high-school graduates last year with admissions profiles best-suited for Morehouse College," Mr. Wilson says. "We got less than 15 percent of them to apply."

Mr. Clay's report on black col­leges, "Facing the Future," sees increased selectivity as key. "Improving the quality of the student body means focusing on enrolling students who have the preparation to be successful," he writes. "This is an important part of the transformation" that historically black colleges will need to engineer.

For financial reasons alone, "it's going to be very difficult for institutions to remain open access," as most are, says Kassie Freeman, who has published several studies on enrollment at historically black colleges. Ms. Freeman recommends that black colleges expand their recruiting, which in many cases is limited to their immediate region or nearby urban areas, she said.

More than two-thirds of Morehouse's enrollment comes from out of state, according to data from the U.S. Department of Education.

In some cases, historically black colleges have been able to capitalize on the growing Hispanic population in their regions. Hispanic students are now the majority at several black colleges in Texas, for example. At Morehouse, however, 96 percent of the students are African American. All are male, but there are women from neighboring Spelman College and Clark Atlanta University who take classes at Morehouse.

The students who have already enrolled seem enthusiastic about Mr. Wilson's ideas. Jarvis Gray is studying political science and serves as the junior class president at Morehouse, which he chose for its emphasis on building leadership skills. But, he says, he has a "love hate" relationship with the college because of bureaucratic inefficiencies and lagging technology. For example, requesting the use of a campus building for a student activity requires a lot of tedious paperwork and could be better accomplished electronically, he says.

Faculty members have also, so far, welcomed Mr. Wilson's approach and message, which includes plans to increase faculty salaries and improve facilities.

John Kermit (J.K.) Haynes, dean of math and science at Morehouse, says faculty members appreciate that Mr. Wilson has been open and candid with them both about the college's difficulties as well as his proposed solutions.

"We've been challenged in recent years with raising money," says Mr. Haynes, a Morehouse graduate who has taught here for more than 30 years. "We need John Wilson to be successful."

Clarissa Myrick-Harris, dean of humanities and social sciences, says Mr. Wilson's experiences both in and outside historically black colleges will be a strength. "It's impossible to move an institution forward if you're myopic," she says.

Yet there is evidence that Morehouse has been reluctant to change in the past: Many of the problems that disturbed Mr. Wilson during his student days persist, he wrote in e-mail, without being specific.

Mr. Wilson expects that "there's going to be resistance" to doing some things differently, but he is counting on the stakeholders at Morehouse "to get ready for a different kind of journey here, and embrace change the way we have never embraced it before."
« Last Edit: April 16, 2013, 06:47:34 PM by klg14 »
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Offline Brother Tony

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Re: Only 15% Appiled to Morehouse College
« Reply #1 on: April 17, 2013, 08:28:31 AM »
"$$$"
TUSKEGEE.....THE GIFT THAT KEEPS ON GIVING!

"BRINGING THE WORLD TO TUSKEGEE AND TUSKEGEE TO THE WORLD"

Offline jag4life

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Re: Only 15% Appiled to Morehouse College
« Reply #2 on: April 17, 2013, 09:23:09 AM »
15% of 20K is 3,000.  Morehouse's enrollment is under 2,500.

3,000 freshmen applying to a school that only enrolls a total of 2,500 is pretty damn good.

Offline Jay_Thomas

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Re: Only 15% Appiled to Morehouse College
« Reply #3 on: April 17, 2013, 09:40:10 AM »
jag, thats what I was adding up too.

But....

In the fall of 2012, only a third of the students Morehouse accepted enrolled, compared with nearly half of those accepted in 2008, according to Moody's.

Now what THAT^^^ number is, the article doesn't state. 

But they have to consider in this economy and cuts in federal financial aid that $$$$ is a factor, heyal, its ALWAYS been a factor.

My preference would be to see enrollment go back in to the 3,000's.  I never liked the idea of limiting it to 2600 students.

I think President Wilson can get it done.  ;)   :nod:

Offline Capler

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Re: Only 15% Appiled to Morehouse College
« Reply #4 on: April 17, 2013, 09:56:58 AM »
"Mr. Clay's report on black col­leges, "Facing the Future," sees increased selectivity as key. "Improving the quality of the student body means focusing on enrolling students who have the preparation to be successful," he writes. "This is an important part of the transformation" that historically black colleges will need to engineer."

This is the case with the entire African American community. The days of 'not doing' are over. I hate to say this but if there are some in our community who refuse to get on board, then they need to be left behind. And yes, I'm talking about families who don't place an emphasis on education, when all their kids have to do is get up out of bed and go. Even if a child is a slow learner, there are services for them. 

Offline NovaSkegee

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Morehouse College's Leader Seeks to Reverse Decline
« Reply #5 on: April 17, 2013, 11:43:14 AM »
April 15, 2013

Morehouse College's Leader Seeks to Reverse Decline



By Eric Kelderman
The Chronicle of Higher Education

Walking across the campus of his alma mater, Morehouse College, President John S. Wilson Jr. points out buildings named for famous alumni and leaders of the civil-rights movement.

The building that used to be called Thurman Hall, where Mr. Wilson lived as a freshman in 1975, was named for the influential 20th-century theologian, Howard Thurman. Du Bois Hall, where Mr. Wilson lived his sophomore through senior years, is named for W.E.B. Du Bois. King Chapel is named for the college's best-known alumnus, Martin Luther King Jr.

The names on the buildings represent the people and ideals that students seek to model their lives on, says Mr. Wilson, who became president of the all-male, historically black college in January. He chose to live in Du Bois Hall, he says, because he wanted to emulate the great scholar, a graduate of Fisk University, another black college, who advocated for higher education for African-Americans as a way to lift them out of poverty and erase the damages of slavery in the United States.

"These guys lived lives that were worthy of being on a building," says Mr. Wilson.

Now, the leadership and inspiration that led to the formation and growth of black colleges during the 19th and 20th centuries needs to take a new form, he says: What students at Morehouse need is someone who will step up and donate the money to build a new building, or endow a scholarship fund.

Improving the fund-raising operation is just one of the ways that Morehouse can "make a surge to a new echelon," says Mr. Wilson, who was previously director of the White House Initiative on Historically Black Colleges and Universities. "Being president allows me the chance to shift Morehouse from needy to nimble," he says. "The strongest are nimble."

Mr. Wilson's efforts will be closely watched by other black colleges, where the promise of change has come a lot easier than the process. Raising money to improve campus buildings and equipment, for example, has been a major hurdle, even for the best-known historically black colleges, like Morehouse.

A deeper challenge will be to reverse a decline in enrollment that has not only compounded the financial struggles of those institutions but also undermined their reputation as the best places for high-achieving black students.

"My goal is to see the place that I imagined as a student," Mr. Wilson says. "I imagine a great Morehouse—an awesome place."

The nation's 105 historically black colleges are credited with successfully lifting freed slaves and their descendants out of illiteracy after the Civil War and helping to create a black middle class as the 20th century matured.

Even as traditionally white colleges were integrating by the mid-1970s, black colleges remained vital as places for African-American students to succeed and become empowered by the supportive environment and cultural identity.

Mr. Wilson, who attended an integrated high school in Philadelphia, says Morehouse appealed to him, in part, because there he would not feel like "the other," he says.

The strong cultural connections and nurturing environment are still a draw for many who attend historically black colleges. Anré Washington, a senior and student-government president at Morehouse, says the college was the only one he applied to, because of its "history, what it stood for, what it taught young men to be."

But a dwindling percentage of young African-Americans are making the choice that Mr. Washington made.

Enrollment of black students at black colleges has steadily declined as a percentage of black students over all. Just 11 percent of all black students now choose black colleges as other sectors of higher education have aggressively sought to diversify their campuses. While black colleges still award more than 20 percent of the undergraduate degrees earned by black students, two for-profit institutions, the University of Phoenix and Ashford University, now lead the nation in the overall numbers of bachelor's degrees awarded to African-Americans.

The students that many black colleges are losing to predominantly white colleges are often the top academic performers, says Phillip L. Clay, a professor of city planning and former chancellor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a friend and former colleague of Mr. Wilson's.

As a result, a greater share of the students attending black colleges are underprepared, making for lower retention and graduation rates, Mr. Clay writes in a study of black colleges he did while serving as a senior fellow at the Ford Foundation.

Some historically black colleges have responded to declining enrollment by lowering admissions standards, but many don't have the money to help underprepared students succeed academically, says Kassie Freeman, a former vice president for academic and student affairs for the Southern University system, based in Baton Rouge, La. Struggling students cost more to educate, because they need more academic advising and tutoring, for example.

Financial viability has long been a challenge for historically black colleges, which have primarily served low-income students. In addition, they have had a lower percentage of alumni support, between 5 percent and 11 percent, compared with predominantly white colleges, where on average more than 20 percent of alumni are donors.

The median amount of total cash and investments for the more than 500 col­leges rated by Moody's Investors Service was more than $200-million in 2011, compared with a median amount of $49-million for the 18 historically black colleges Moody's rates.

The recent economic downturn has put an added strain on many black colleges, where an above-average number of students and families are unable to afford the tuition increases that could bolster the colleges' bottom lines.

Morehouse's academic performance is far above average compared with most historically black colleges, but it has significant financial challenges. Since the fall of 2007, Morehouse's enrollment has dropped nearly 16 percent, to about 2,300 students, according to a December report from Moody's, despite a goal of increasing enrollment to 2,600. Morehouse's endowment is about $140-million, but the small private colleges that Mr. Wilson wants Morehouse to be compared with all have more than a billion in the bank.

In the fall of 2012, only a third of the students Morehouse accepted enrolled, compared with nearly half of those accepted in 2008, according to Moody's.

The college took another big hit in the fall when more than 100 Morehouse students chose not to attend after their parents were denied federal Parent PLUS Loans because of tighter lending standards.


Mr. Wilson says he has been contemplating how to improve the college since he was a student here. "I used to call my sister at Swarthmore and ask her about the way it was run," he says.

Those comparisons were partly the basis for an essay Mr. Wilson wrote at the time for the student newspaper that he titled "Disturbed About Morehouse." The title echoed the name of a book, Disturbed About Man, written by Morehouse's president emeritus, Benjamin E. Mays.

In the essay, Mr. Wilson says he raised issues "like our need to be more selective, the high attrition rate, the obvious apathy of too many students, and the need for more of an emphasis on developing character as a central part of the Morehouse experience." As a student, Mr. Wilson told the former president that he "loved Morehouse, but he didn't always like it."

Mr. Mays challenged him to get some experience and then come back to try to improve the college, Mr. Wilson says.

He did just that, earning a master of theological studies from Harvard University, and both a master's and a doctorate in administration, planning, and social policy, from Harvard.

He worked for 16 years at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, becoming director of foundation relations and assistant provost, and overseeing two capital campaigns that raised a total of $2.7-billion.

After moving to the Washington, D.C., area, he became an associate professor of higher education at George Washington University, served as executive dean of the university's Virginia campus, and helped to develop a strategic plan for the institution.

Mr. Wilson lists the characteristics of selective liberal-arts colleges, like Amherst, Grinnell, and Swarthmore, that Morehouse should aspire to, including a healthy endowment, competitive faculty salaries, a brand that attracts an appropriate caliber of student, and a state-of-the-art educational environment.

The key to improving those aspects of Morehouse lies in enhancing the use of technology in all aspects of campus operations and becoming "data driven," Mr. Wilson says, especially to streamline student-support services. In a January interview on NPR, Mr. Wilson explained that many alumni of black colleges feel a kind of "nausea" about the poor customer service from the financial-aid office or the registrar.

Data-driven efficiency and the use of best practices are not new in higher education, and Mr. Wilson is one of a cadre of new leaders seeking to raise the stature and financial viability of historically black colleges through such methods. "Historically black colleges can and should be among the best in class among American universities," he says.

Other presidents who are seen as leading this movement include Walter M. Kimbrough, president of Dillard University, M. Christopher Brown II at Alcorn State University, and David J. Wilson of Morgan State University.

Their reform message has received a mixed reception.

Mr. Kimbrough became president of Dillard in 2011 after seven years of rehabilitating the struggling Philander Smith College, in Arkansas­—his first job as a college president. Mr. Kimbrough was popular with Philander Smith students because of his youthful demeanor and engaging personality, and he was successful at turning the college around by focusing on the academic performance of the institution, including measures to improve retention and graduation rates, raise faculty salaries, and increase the percentage of alumni giving.

David J. Wilson, president of Morgan State University, in Baltimore, has not enjoyed the same smooth sailing. Following a president who served for more than a quarter century, Mr. Wilson was just three years into his tenure when Morgan State's Board of Regents tried to oust him.

David Wilson's agenda for Morgan State has included an effort to raise admissions standards and increase the amount of sponsored research that faculty members are awarded, particularly in the sciences. To facilitate that, Mr. Wilson created a new vice presidency for research and economic development.

But the chairman of the board, Dallas R. Evans, blamed the president for hiring new administrators rather than "allocate additional positions for faculty, who teach our students, write grants, conduct research, and do community outreach."

The chairman was later ousted from his position. Morgan State's board eventually reversed its decision and offered Mr. Wilson a one-year contract extension.

MIT's Phillip Clay, in his study of black colleges, writes about how a culture of a nurturing family environment—among the hallmarks of the institutions—can lead to a paternalistic style of leadership that discourages innovation within the college, expects students to endure poor services, and fosters an insularity that rejects advice or collaboration from outside the college.

David Wilson agrees that some historically black colleges cling to the way things have always been done. "If you have been living in a matchbox for a long time, and you pretty much have been conditioned not to think of things beyond the matchbox, and if someone removes it, you may think it still represents the parameters of what you can and cannot do," he says.

John Wilson has few specific plans so far. His first few weeks were consumed with relocating and getting settled in the middle of the academic year­—a visit to his office in February revealed bookshelves only half filled. And he'd had to deal with the February 1 shooting of a Morehouse student after a basketball game on campus. The victim was injured but expected to recover fully.

Yet Mr. Wilson carefully spells out the four main areas he wants to focus on: improved fund raising, more efficient and effective administrative operations, more campus activities for students, and improving Morehouse's image both locally and nationally.

The college will also need a more intensive student-recruitment effort to reverse enrollment declines while, simultaneously, becoming more selective in admissions.

"There were 20,000 African-American male high-school graduates last year with admissions profiles best-suited for Morehouse College," Mr. Wilson says. "We got less than 15 percent of them to apply."

Mr. Clay's report on black col­leges, "Facing the Future," sees increased selectivity as key. "Improving the quality of the student body means focusing on enrolling students who have the preparation to be successful," he writes. "This is an important part of the transformation" that historically black colleges will need to engineer.

For financial reasons alone, "it's going to be very difficult for institutions to remain open access," as most are, says Kassie Freeman, who has published several studies on enrollment at historically black colleges. Ms. Freeman recommends that black colleges expand their recruiting, which in many cases is limited to their immediate region or nearby urban areas, she said.

More than two-thirds of Morehouse's enrollment comes from out of state, according to data from the U.S. Department of Education.

In some cases, historically black colleges have been able to capitalize on the growing Hispanic population in their regions. Hispanic students are now the majority at several black colleges in Texas, for example. At Morehouse, however, 96 percent of the students are African American. All are male, but there are women from neighboring Spelman College and Clark Atlanta University who take classes at Morehouse.

The students who have already enrolled seem enthusiastic about Mr. Wilson's ideas. Jarvis Gray is studying political science and serves as the junior class president at Morehouse, which he chose for its emphasis on building leadership skills. But, he says, he has a "love hate" relationship with the college because of bureaucratic inefficiencies and lagging technology. For example, requesting the use of a campus building for a student activity requires a lot of tedious paperwork and could be better accomplished electronically, he says.

Faculty members have also, so far, welcomed Mr. Wilson's approach and message, which includes plans to increase faculty salaries and improve facilities.

John Kermit (J.K.) Haynes, dean of math and science at Morehouse, says faculty members appreciate that Mr. Wilson has been open and candid with them both about the college's difficulties as well as his proposed solutions.

"We've been challenged in recent years with raising money," says Mr. Haynes, a Morehouse graduate who has taught here for more than 30 years. "We need John Wilson to be successful."

Clarissa Myrick-Harris, dean of humanities and social sciences, says Mr. Wilson's experiences both in and outside historically black colleges will be a strength. "It's impossible to move an institution forward if you're myopic," she says.

Yet there is evidence that Morehouse has been reluctant to change in the past: Many of the problems that disturbed Mr. Wilson during his student days persist, he wrote in e-mail, without being specific.

Mr. Wilson expects that "there's going to be resistance" to doing some things differently, but he is counting on the stakeholders at Morehouse "to get ready for a different kind of journey here, and embrace change the way we have never embraced it before."

Offline EB

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Re: Only 15% Appiled to Morehouse College
« Reply #6 on: April 17, 2013, 12:45:57 PM »
jag, thats what I was adding up too.

But....

In the fall of 2012, only a third of the students Morehouse accepted enrolled, compared with nearly half of those accepted in 2008, according to Moody's.

Now what THAT^^^ number is, the article doesn't state. 

But they have to consider in this economy and cuts in federal financial aid that $$$$ is a factor, heyal, its ALWAYS been a factor.

My preference would be to see enrollment go back in to the 3,000's.  I never liked the idea of limiting it to 2600 students.

I think President Wilson can get it done.  ;)   :nod:

On these kinds of issues, I think about the state of the economy.  I also think that unlike in 1980 that there are (or were during the '90s) three loans for every grant.  These factors will eventually have an effect sooner or later.

Offline Bearforlife

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Re: Only 15% Appiled to Morehouse College
« Reply #7 on: April 17, 2013, 12:56:49 PM »
Yes. It's about the money and I agree with Cap. It's high time black folk put an emphasis on education and not sports and their children wearing the latest Jordans to school!

Also, people will borrow plenty of money to buy a car or whatever else they WANT but the education their child NEEDS someone else should pay for or the school should subsidize.

I'm all for SCHOLARships but like brother Cap said, all our kids have to do is get out of bed.

Offline Neymar

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Re: Only 15% Appiled to Morehouse College
« Reply #8 on: April 17, 2013, 01:25:43 PM »
Its too expensive brothers. That is the only issue..


You cant charge 25k per year(and this is living off campus) and expect numbers to remain high when there are cheaper and better options in the area. Georgia tech kids get jobs for days and technically run georgia and they only charge 10k or so a year. These kids come out with 50k+ jobs too..

Even if you cant get into Tech. SPSU,State,West Georgia, and even georgia southern gives you cheaper options. Outcomes arent much different either. Clark Atlanta kids are even getting the same type of salaries we are getting coming out. I see it.

In the end, it is all about paying all of that for the brand.  The brand is nowhere near worth going 100k in debt. Simple as that, and in this economy kids are smarter.

Hey johnny you got a 3.5? How about you go to tech for dam near free(it is with hope, and just about any scholarship past that point to cover room and board) instead of spending all that money on undergrad.

Johnny comes out with a nice job. Has more buying power because he isnt being raped in the behind every month by the government and sallie Mae. He can afford to take girls out to the nice restaurants without having to shame them into paying half since he is thinking about loans, and he can go to grad school without worrying about the interest on his present loans going into the six figures. He is a cool guy.

In fact, the only kids getting raped even more than US are those kids at Emory. No way in hell is Emory even remotely worth 40k alone in tuition, and I dont care if they run Atlanta. The only good thing they have is an alumni network which actually looks after their new grads. A new girl in my office is from Emory and directly got the job through their alumni network. I had to put my boots on the ground to even find alumni willing to talk, and even then they seem more bothered than anything else...whatever. Emory still is a ripoff at that price.

They say:

UGA boys run Georgia
Emory men run Atlanta
Techie geeks create our networks
SPSU proles keep the networks online
Agnes Scott women become their(upperclass) wife
Georgian Southern girls become Your(lowerclass) wife


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Online cee dog

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Re: Only 15% Appiled to Morehouse College
« Reply #9 on: April 17, 2013, 02:49:39 PM »
Who is SPSU? Beside Neymar the only reason GT grads come out with high salaries is because they are the only school in Ga to offer full engineering degrees until UGA started last year. Everyone else only offered Engineering Technology degrees and not that many schools beside Ga SU, FVSU, SSU or Southern Tech offered those. My friend that is called controlling a system to benefit you. You are very naive about life I see.
« Last Edit: April 17, 2013, 02:53:28 PM by cee dog »
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Offline Capler

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Re: Only 15% Appiled to Morehouse College
« Reply #10 on: April 17, 2013, 02:56:29 PM »
Education has never been cheap, especially at the college level. It has to be paid for by somebody. The difference today is the fact that public sources of funding have evaporated. People also need to realize that a k-12 education is an expensive luxury as well, and treat it as such. No we may not be paying directly out of pocket but trust me, we are paying. If you own a home and pay state taxes, most of your money is going toward supporting the school system.  
I said that to say, the cost of education is not going to come down in this country. Just like with healthcare, we have to suck it up and find a way to pay for it, otherwise we won't get it. Can we afford healthcare and education in this country. Yes, but it means we may not be able to live the lifestyle most of us feel we deserve.

Offline Neymar

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Re: Only 15% Appiled to Morehouse College
« Reply #11 on: April 17, 2013, 03:59:22 PM »
Who is SPSU? Beside Neymar the only reason GT grads come out with high salaries is because they are the only school in Ga to offer full engineering degrees until UGA started last year. Everyone else only offered Engineering Technology degrees and not that many schools beside Ga SU, FVSU, SSU or Southern Tech offered those. My friend that is called controlling a system to benefit you. You are very naive about life I see.

Engineering salaries are s--t to everybody but english and history majors.

Techie business school degrees blow others out of the water. A liberal artist from tech gets more too based on the quant angle of the courses they take.


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Offline Neymar

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Re: Only 15% Appiled to Morehouse College
« Reply #12 on: April 17, 2013, 04:01:09 PM »
Education has never been cheap

Yes it was.

Baby boomers got an affordable education, yet hijacked the prices when it was time for their kids and grandkids.


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Offline Capler

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Re: Only 15% Appiled to Morehouse College
« Reply #13 on: April 17, 2013, 04:07:09 PM »
Education has never been cheap

Yes it was.

Baby boomers got an affordable education, yet hijacked the prices when it was time for their kids and grandkids.

I have talked to older people who went to college 70 years ago and they said it was not cheap for them back them. Families had to take a large portion of their earnings to pay for the education. Then kids had to work on campus producing a product to sell just to stay there. But back then, it was normal for them to to work for their needs.

Offline Neymar

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Re: Only 15% Appiled to Morehouse College
« Reply #14 on: April 17, 2013, 04:14:35 PM »
Education has never been cheap

Yes it was.

Baby boomers got an affordable education, yet hijacked the prices when it was time for their kids and grandkids.

I have talked to older people who went to college 70 years ago and they said it was not cheap for them back them. Families had to take a large portion of their earnings to pay for the education. Then kids had to work on campus producing a product to sell just to stay there. But back then, it was normal for them to to work for their needs.

The fact that they could work on campus to stay proves that it was more affordable back then.

What could a kid do today to earn the 40k(tuition alone) it would take to stay a single year at Emory? Maybe if the girl is pretty with blonde hair she could find a sugar daddy to bite the bullet for her, but that isnt an option for everybody. There is NOTHING a kid can do today to earn enough to get the top draw education+alumni network of a premier school.

It may have cost money, but that isnt the same as the highway robbery they are pulling now. No baby boomers  started life with the six figure debt level kids are starting with today. These kids wont be able to start a family until they are in their 40s unless they luck out.

A college degree in the 60's and you had a nice union job, stay at home wife, gated community house in the burbs,two kids, two cars, and a vacation to disney world and a cruise every alternating year.

A college degree now and you have unemployment, boomers looking down on you, and sallie mae strapping that dildo for anal session on you every single month. You are also living with your parents.


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