why UNC over Duke, is it the state college effect? |
Duke was more segregated. My perspective is dated so this could no longer be the case, and there were definitely plenty of exceptions to the rule, but there was a lot of pressure for black students to stick to themselves, which interestingly came more from their community than from being excluded by whites (though that also did happen). |
good point |
| Not going to find one. Maybe compromise on a college in a city with Black people, like Atlanta. |
| A big state university will have a lot of Black people in a small area, even if the percentage isn't high. |
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What major?
STEM? Humanities? Business? Art? |
I'm a minority as well (not black) but student demographics were never a part of our kid's college decisions. Yes, it helps to have some with similar life experiences but no need to limit your friend group to one ethnicity or race or religion. We are a sum of people close to us, its better for humans to have a diverse community. Just my 2 cents. |
I think Amherst has a black only dorm. Boggles my mind. |
Please tell you're not black as this is such a horrible take. OP, as a HU grad myself, I implore you to look into some of the dual enrollment programs. Your kid can get the best of both worlds. For example, he can start his years at Morehouse and get a degree from there while also getting one from Georgia Tech. There are partnerships with Columbia, Notre Dame, Michigan, Brown, Dartmouth, Vanderbilt etc. |
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Emory
Oberlin George Washington U Drexel |
Don’t most colleges have all black fraternities and sororities as well? |
| Schools in Atlanta, DC and Philadelphia- where there are large African-American populations and lots of colleges and universities around . If the kids can find their social niche in a smaller college town or rural area, that’s great, but it may be easier in a big city. |
I was referring to preparation, not ability, of course i am generalizing, the average black income at Morehouse is 65K, state colleges is 110K, Ivy league is over 200K |
Yes! Meyerhoff is a National Model for STEM excellence. Not sure what the future of the program might be with the assault on DEI initiatives in higher ed, but it's a very respected program. |
Agree. Also look at USC |