About Black Schools...

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If it followed the same model that most schools use but it happened to have all black staff and students, No I wouldn't send my children. It would have to be able to brake the mold and be geared toward teaching and dealing with the black people problems
 
Sounds like he has good intentions, but the road to ruin is paved with those. If they don't have the students or money, which is why the college closed in the first place, it will be difficult to be successful. He needs to look further into the causes of the school closing in the first place.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/benjamin-todd-jealous/st-pauls-college-and-the_b_3961623.html

This fall, as college campuses open their doors to the bustle of students, one historically black institution will remain silent. In the old colonial town of Lawrenceville, Va., Saint Paul's College has shut its doors after more than a century of operation. The college had fallen on hard times in recent years, and it serves as a canary in the coal mine for other historically black colleges and universities that face an uncertain economic future.

Saint Paul's College was founded in 1888 by my grandfather's uncle, James Solomon Russell. A former slave who died an archdeacon and university principal-emeritus, Russell understood the transformative power of education. He opened Saint Paul's Normal and Industrial School with fewer than a dozen students and a mandate to train teachers. Over the next 125 years, the school became a hub for education training in the region, producing many teachers in Virginia and neighboring states.

Many of the students who attended Saint Paul's over the years were the first in their family to attend college. The vast majority came from poor families. The school even offered a child-care program for single parents enrolled in classes. Like so many other HBCUs in underserved communities, Saint Paul's was a lifeline.

The recent recession hit Saint Paul's especially hard. Like many HBCUs, the college lacked a wealthy donor base or strong endowment that could help it weather the financial storm. Faced with mounting bills, college officials closed the child-care program, laid off top teachers, and watched enrollment numbers fall back to near-1888 levels. Last fall, St. Paul's opened its final academic year with just over 100 students before shuttering its doors for good.



However, even the wealthier HBCUs are struggling financially. Morehouse College was recently forced to furlough some of its staff, and Clark Atlanta and Hampton Universities have both announced budget shortages. This June, a Howard University trustee, Renee Higginbotham-Brooks, wrote an alarming letter about Howard's "genuine" financial trouble.

The recession only partly explains this crisis. Part of the reason is political. In 2011 the Department of Education tightened the standards for its Parent PLUS federal loan program. The program has historically been an important service for parents of HBCU students, who are more likely to need financial support.

The new standards have had a devastating effect. In the 2012-13 school year alone, the volume of Parent PLUS loans to HBCU families dropped by 36 percent, according to an analysis by the Washington Post. Parents of 28,000 HBCU students were initially denied loans under the stricter standards, causing HBCU's as a whole to lose $150 million in expected revenue.



This slow bleed will continue as long as the tighter standards are in place. As the president of the UNCF, Michael Lomax, has recommended, the Department of Education should find a way to preserve financial aid instead of undercutting the students it is supposed to serve. Meanwhile, it is encouraging to see that the department is allowing families with small-scale debt -- black, white, or otherwise -- to become eligible for PLUS loans through an appeals process.

 
down here in NC they tring to close down Elizabeth City State University. but its NC they hate education

in general.
 
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I really hope they raise enough money for this. The black community needs this investment. Yes, I would use this school and yes, employment is possible. It's time to take some type of positive action instead of just bitching about it.
 

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