Category Archives: Lists

HBCU Money™ Business Book Feature – Television’s Imageable Influences: The Self-Perception of Young African-Americans

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Camille O. Cosby presents a startling examination of how young African-Americans are dramatically impacted by the pervasive negative images of their culture that are regularly portrayed on television. Dr. Cosby shows how American media establishments have engineered a climate of ignorance and disenfranchisement by fostering misinformation and indifference. She maintains that a national viewers’ boycott of programming containing such negative images is the first step towards making the television industry face up to its responsibility as the most powerful communications tool in our nation.
Contents: Statement of the Problem; Influence of Perception on Human Behavior; The Impact of Television Images on How Individuals View Themselves; What Specific Aspects of Self Are Addressed by Particular Television Imageries of African-Americans? What Possible Influences Do Particular Television Imageries Have on Self-Perceptions of Selected Young Adult African-Americans? What Specific Aspects of Self Are Addressed by Particular Television Imageries of African-Americans? What Possible Influence Do Particular Television Imageries Have on Self-Perceptions of Selected Young Adult African-Americans? Nielson Media Research; Personal History Form and Profiles of Interviewees.

Student Debt Profile By Conference (School By School) – The CIAA

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Bowie State University

Average debt of graduates, 2011 – $24 291

Proportion of graduates with debt, 2011 – 76%

Nonfederal debt, % of total debt of graduates, 2011 – 9%

2010-11 Pell Grant recipients – 52%

Elizabeth City State University

Average debt of graduates, 2011 – $3 846

Proportion of graduates with debt, 2011 – 44%

Nonfederal debt, % of total debt of graduates, 2011 – 49%

2010-11 Pell Grant recipients – 66%

Fayetteville State University

Average debt of graduates, 2011 – N/A

Proportion of graduates with debt, 2011 – N/A

Nonfederal debt, % of total debt of graduates, 2011 – N/A

2010-11 Pell Grant recipients – 72%

Johnson C. Smith University

Average debt of graduates, 2011 – $46 673

Proportion of graduates with debt, 2011 – 100%

Nonfederal debt, % of total debt of graduates, 2011 – 5%

2010-11 Pell Grant recipients – 58%

Lincoln (PA) University

Average debt of graduates, 2011 – N/A

Proportion of graduates with debt, 2011 – N/A

Nonfederal debt, % of total debt of graduates, 2011 – N/A

2010-11 Pell Grant recipients – 64%

Livingstone College

Average debt of graduates, 2011 – N/A

Proportion of graduates with debt, 2011 – N/A

Nonfederal debt, % of total debt of graduates, 2011 – N/A

2010-11 Pell Grant recipients – 84%

Saint Augustine’s University

Average debt of graduates, 2011 – $12 652

Proportion of graduates with debt, 2011 – 93%

Nonfederal debt, % of total debt of graduates, 2011 – 8%

2010-11 Pell Grant recipients – 74%

Shaw University

Average debt of graduates, 2011 – N/A

Proportion of graduates with debt, 2011 – N/A

Nonfederal debt, % of total debt of graduates, 2011 – N/A

2010-11 Pell Grant recipients – 75%

Virginia State University

Average debt of graduates, 2011 – $28 250

Proportion of graduates with debt, 2011 – 90%

Nonfederal debt, % of total debt of graduates, 2011 – 24%

2010-11 Pell Grant recipients – 71%

Virginia Union University

Average debt of graduates, 2011 – N/A

Proportion of graduates with debt, 2011 – N/A

Nonfederal debt, % of total debt of graduates, 2011 – N/A

2010-11 Pell Grant recipients – 67%

Winston-Salem State University

Average debt of graduates, 2011 – N/A

Proportion of graduates with debt, 2011 – N/A

Nonfederal debt, % of total debt of graduates, 2011 – N/A

2010-11 Pell Grant recipients – 53%

Source: The Project on Student Debt

HBCU Money™ Business Book Feature – Full Planet, Empty Plates: The New Geopolitics of Food Scarcity

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With food supplies tightening, countries are competing for the land and water resources needed to feed their people.

With food scarcity driven by falling water tables, eroding soils, and rising temperatures, control of arable land and water resources is moving to center stage in the global struggle for food security. “In this era of tightening world food supplies, the ability to grow food is fast becoming a new form of geopolitical leverage. Food is the new oil,” Lester R. Brown writes.

What will the geopolitics of food look like in a new era dominated by scarcity and food nationalism? Brown outlines the political implications of land acquisitions by grain-importing countries in Africa and elsewhere as well as the world’s shrinking buffers against poor harvests. With wisdom accumulated over decades of tracking agricultural issues, Brown exposes the increasingly volatile food situation the world is facing.

2012’s Top 20 HBCU Research Institutions

HBCUs continue to make significant strides in research. The top 20 HBCU research institutions all fall in the top 330 research institutions in America. Unfortunately, none of the top HBCU research institutions make their way into the top 100 so there is still significant work to be done. The 1890 agriculture schools comprise 6 of the top 20 and HBCU medical schools make up 3 of the top 10. A sign that one of the 1890 schools could make significant strides with the addition of a medical school is a strategic issue that must be addressed among HBCUs.

Florida A&M University performs nothing less than a miracle making the leap from the 6 spot to number 1 by more than doubling its research expenditure budget. At the same time Meharry slides from 3 to 8 showing that in any given year a new king can be crowned with the right vision by leadership. Research is still a very under appreciated facet of HBCU life despite the fact that most of the major wealth in America has come as a result of research on college and university campuses. An investment in the mental curiosity of African America could go a long way to much needed innovation and job creation.

If you want to see your HBCU move up this listing you can donate directly to the research budget at your HBCU!

HBCU                                                                    Research Expenditures

1. Florida A&M University                                    $53.5 million

2. Jackson State University                                  $44.9 million

3. Howard University                                            $40.1 million

4. North Carolina A&T State University            $35.3 million

5. University of the Virgin Islands                      $32.4 million

6. Alabama A&M University                                $30.5 million

7. Morehouse School of Medicine                       $30.4 million

8. Meharry College of Medicine                          $27.0 million

9. Charles Drew University of Medicine           $22.2 million

10. Alabama State University                              $16.3 million

11. Tuskegee University                                        $15.6 million

12. Delaware State University                             $15.2 million

13. Hampton University                                       $14.5 million

14. Morgan State University                                $12.8 million

15. Prairie View A&M University                        $12.6 million

16. Tennessee State University                           $12.4 million

17. Fayetteville State University                         $11.9 million

18. Alcorn State University                                  $10.3 million

19. University of Maryland-Eastern Shore      $8.7 million

20. Clark Atlanta University                               $8.5 million

TOP 20 COMBINED TOTAL: $455.1 million

Additional Notes:

Total HBCU Research Expenditures Combined: $605.7 million

Top 20 HWCUs Combined: $18.3 billion

Top 20 Average HWCU – $910 million vs. Top 20 Average HBCU – $23 million

Top 20 HBCUs increase in research expenditure from 2011 is 30.1%

Top 20 HWCUs increase in research expenditure from 2011 is 11.6%

Source: National Science Foundation

HBCU Money™ Business Book Feature – Planetwalker: 22 Years of Walking. 17 Years of Silence

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When the struggle to save oil-soaked birds and restore blackened beaches left him feeling frustrated and helpless, John Francis decided to take a more fundamental and personal stand—he stopped using all forms of motorized transportation. Soon after embarking on this quest that would span two decades and two continents, he took a vow of silence that endured for 17 years. It began as a silent environmental protest, but as a young African-American man, walking across the country in the early 1970s, his idea of “the environment” expanded beyond concern about pollution and loss of habitat to include how we humans treat each other and how we can better communicate and work together to benefit the earth.

Through his silence and walking, he learned to listen, and along the way, earned college and graduate degrees in science and environmental studies. An amazing human-interest story with a vital message, Planetwalker is also an engaging coming-of-age pilgrimage.