-Caveat Lector-

http://www.detnews.com/2001/schools/0107/15/a01-247739.htm

Sunday, July 15, 2001
The Detroit News.

The Graduation Gap: A Detroit News Special Report

Colleges' retention of blacks dismal

Analysis shows just 40% of blacks graduated compared to 61% of whites in
Mich. schools

By Janet Vandenabeele, and Jodi Upton
The Detroit News


African-American students are dropping out of Michigan universities at
rates far greater than whites, adrift at schools that vigorously recruited
them.

A Detroit News investigation of seven Michigan universities shows that
among black students who were freshmen in 1994, just 40 percent got their
diplomas after six years, compared to 61 percent of white students and 74
percent of Asians.

"We're throwing them out after taking their money and they're getting
nothing out of it," said Barry Mehler, a history professor at Ferris State
University, who helped start a program to keep minority students in
college. "We're mugging (the majority) of them, taking their money, taking
their dignity.

"I feel like I am participating in a vast criminal conspiracy."

The falloff between white and black graduation rates here raises
high-impact issues, because Michigan sits in the epicenter of the national
debate over affirmative action in college admissions:

* The state's universities have special programs aimed at helping black
students meet financial, social and academic challenges, but graduation
rates for blacks haven't improved consistently over the past decade, The
News found.

* Universities knowingly admit students who have a high chance of failing.

* Michigan has presented itself as a test case for affirmative action in
higher education, but the state is no national model on how to retain black
students.

Experts blame a variety of reasons for high dropout rates among
African-American students, from money to inadequate academic preparation to
an unfriendly campus climate.

"A lot of students don't feel like there's a true effort to make
universities diverse," said Bryan Cook, a doctoral student who advises
black fraternities at the University of Michigan. "They think it's a show
commitment and the programs they offer are watered-down."

Knowing why blacks are dropping out doesn't mean the universities are on
top of the issue.

"It's the nature of the beast," said Lester Monts, U-M's senior
vice-provost for academic affairs. "We just don't have a handle on this.
Most universities don't have a handle on this at all."

When Mario Harper of Oak Park looks at pictures from his freshman year at
Michigan State University, he realizes that a lot of African-American
classmates who started with him are no longer around.

"There are so many who've just dropped out of sight, nowhere to be found,"
said Harper, an MSU senior who graduated from Shrine Catholic High School
in Royal Oak. "I make sure I do the best I can. I want to get rid of that
stereotype of the lazy black male. But it is a lot of pressure."


Better than average

U-M, Michigan State and Central Michigan are the only Division I schools in
Michigan whose black graduate rates are better than the national average --
which, at 39 percent, is nothing to brag about. The reason: They are the
more selective, and tend to get better-prepared and better-financed
students.

The 10 years' worth of data analyzed by The News shows that the more
selective a university is in choosing its students, the more likely its
students are to graduate. That's clearly illustrated by U-M, whose
admission standards are the state's toughest. Conversely, those that are
less choosey about admissions have higher dropout rates.

Of the seven schools studied by The News, the graduation rate for black
students is highest at U-M (about 64 percent over the past decade) and
lowest at Oakland University (about 22 percent).

That compares to white graduation rates of 86 percent at U-M and 43 percent
at Oakland University.

U-M, cheered on by other Michigan universities and blue-chip corporations,
currently is defending legal challenges to its admissions policy, which
favors black applicants over whites and Asians with stronger academic
credentials. The case is likely to be decided by the U.S. Supreme Court.

U-M administrators and supporters say a diverse student body is crucial to
the quality of education -- and to the total college experience -- of all
students.

Dropout figures, however, show there's not much racial diversity left, by
the time students are upperclassmen.

Example: When U-M freshmen began in 1993, 67 percent of the class was white
and 9 percent black. By graduation, the percentage of African-American
students had fallen by a third, to just 6 percent of the class.

Graduation rates among black students are worse at MSU, Central, Eastern
Michigan, Western Michigan, Northern Michigan and Oakland universities. The
News reviewed 10 years of graduation rates at NCAA Division I schools,
because those are the only ones for which national rates are kept. (Wayne
State University has not kept dropout records by student race until
recently; the first set of six-year figures will be out next year.)

Hispanic and Native American students also leave Michigan colleges at rates
higher than whites, and are equally courted by selective schools such as
Michigan and Michigan State. But their graduation rates tend to be higher
than those of African Americans.

College administrators recognize the moral dilemma of recruiting black
students, knowing their high chances of failure.

"We want to make sure we aren't just pushing people in. That's unethical
from my standpoint," said Lee June, MSU vice-president for student affairs.


Pay their own bills

While high dropout rates are commonly blamed on poor academic preparation,
that's not the whole story, some educators believe.

Minority students tend to come from less affluent families, so when the
financial aid check doesn't come, or the grant doesn't cover all the
college bills, parents are less able to bail them out.

Black students may have to work longer hours at a job to pay their own
bills, or to help out with a family crisis. Study time suffers.

Because fewer family members have even attempted college, black students
may find themselves alone when it comes time to make a decision to stay in
school, or quit.

Chandra Cross gave Wayne State University a try last year. But her dreams
of a degree in computer science collapsed amid the weight of tuition
payments.

Hoping to afford tuition working full-time at a Wal-Mart in Taylor, Cross
was surprised to learn that students still have to pay for classes they
drop.

After a few semesters, Cross left. She's now working at a Burger King in
Dearborn Heights.

"The classes were too big and you always had to run around trying to find
your professors," she said.

But not everyone blames the universities. Some minority students fall
victim to the same thing white students do: too much freedom.

"I just didn't go to class," said Tyra Lumpkin, a Detroit student who
attended several semesters at Oakland University in 1999-2000. "I had
become real lax and wasn't concentrating on school."

A few professors asked about her when she quit attending, but Lumpkin said
she was aware of no programs designed to make sure she stayed in school.

"There were no black professors and most of the people in my classes were
white, but that wasn't the problem. It was me." said Lumpkin, who hopes to
attend Alabama State University this fall.

Recent good times may actually have worsened the exodus of minority
students, said Rodney Lopez, a counselor in Wayne State University's
Chicano-Boricua Studies program.

"When the economy is doing real well, they find good jobs and they like the
money," he said.

In the long-run, however, the high African-American dropout rate is costly
for taxpayers, as well as for the students themselves.

If they graduated at the same rate as their white counterparts, minority
students would earn an additional $5.3 billion a year, according to a study
done by the National Center for Public Policy and Higher Education.

And the state, already tightening its belt as the economy contracts, would
be getting an additional $1.9 billion in tax revenues from those
college-degreed, higher-paid workers.


Intimidating atmosphere

For some black students who have grown up in neighborhoods and schools with
few whites, a predominantly white campus can be intimidating and
unwelcoming.

"Sometimes there's a disconnect between universities and students of
color," said U-M graduate student Bryan Cook. "It's not that universities
don't have a desire to enhance diversity. But sometimes, those efforts
backfire and don't work to make life for black students easier. That can be
alienating."

Rina Henry of Detroit said she had little trouble adjusting to campus life
at Wayne State. The bills were tough, though: She worked two jobs and paid
the school $600 every two weeks.

Henry, a computer science major, left Wayne State about six months ago, but
plans to return soon.

"I liked it, but if anything, I wish there was more hands-on teaching with
the professors," she said. "You sit down in class, they write on the
blackboard and tell you to do this, do that, read this, read that."

University officials acknowledge they need to make the whole campus
atmosphere less threatening for everyone -- whites and minorities alike.

"The only way you foster true diversity and plurality is to foster
interactions between all the groups," said Glenn McIntosh, director of
Oakland University's Office of Equity. "(This) will lead to (producing)
leaders of the 21st century. They will be more marketable."

Creating a climate that embraces diversity, at a time when race is a
national obsession, is "a continual challenge," MSU provost Lou Anna Simon
said.

"Do students believe there is a climate issue? Of course. ... Even when we
do something (to encourage tolerance) students live in a larger society. We
get 10,000 new students every year, each with their own perceptions," she
said.

Overcoming long-ingrained ideas of social, academic and economic class may
prove more challenging than simply throwing money into a new program.

Mehler, who heads the Institute for the Study of Academic Racism at Ferris,
which was not among the colleges studied by The News, says don't
underestimate the impact of stereotyping and racism.

"You have many professors who simply are racists. Their racism is based on
their intellectual perception of reality," Mehler said.

Said Bill Bloomfield, a veteran of several national programs for minority
high school and college students: "You need (change) sunk into the bedrock
of the institution from an administrative, budgetary and cultural
perspective.

"The issue isn't so much that the kids don't have the oomph to pull it off.
It ain't the kids' problem."


Staff writer Joel Kurth contributed to this report.

You can reach Janet Vandenabeele at:

(313) 222-2309 or [EMAIL PROTECTED] .


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