CAUTION ==> The data in this table is obsolete. Some programs offered in 2013 are no longer offered in 201, and new programs are offered in 2014 that were not available in 2013
The new 2014 directory can be found ==> Click HERE.
The 2013 table has therefore been removed from this blog until further notice.
This blog was established by the Digital Learning Lab to provide information that supports Black America’s efforts to close the Digital Divide. Its original focus on HBCUs has been broadened to include other colleges, universities, and community-based groups that enhance the computational thinking skills of Black Americans and the networks of successful Black techs who support each others’ efforts to achieve even greater success.
Thursday, May 30, 2013
Directory of HBCU Online & Blended Degree Programs -- 2012
The following table lists the online and blended degree programs offered by the 105 HBCUs in June 2012. (Note: the 2014 Directory is now available)
Tuesday, May 14, 2013
HBCUs -- the Best Producers of Black Graduates in STEM
Using data from the IPEDS Data Center, this note demonstrates that the HBCU community continues to be a more effective producer of black STEM graduates at the undergraduate level than the nation's non-HBCUs taken as a whole. To be more specific, HBCUs are almost twice as productive as non-HBCUs with regards to black female graduates in STEM and more than five times as productive of black female STEM graduates as the for-profit institutions that have enrolled substantial numbers of black undergraduates in recent years
Saturday, May 11, 2013
HBCU Websites & Profiles -- 2013 edition
Last updated: Tuesday 4/15/14 @ 7:20 am-- Helping you select the best HBCUs for your needs --
Profiles of each HBCU include
undergraduate data for average price (Column 2), Pell grant allocations (Column 3), total enrollment (Column 4), black enrollment (Column 5), percent female (Column 6), retention rates (Column 7), 6-year graduation rates for bachelors and 3-year for associates (Column 8) ... plus links to each HBCU's Website, and links to each HBCU's
U.S. Net Price Calculator Center page, comprehensive profile
provided by U.S. College Navigator
(with Google maps showing HBCU locations), and its online & blended degree programs ... Important data about the entire HBCU community are found in the FAQs About HBCUs ... (Note: Five of the 106 HBCUs are not accredited, so their data rows are mostly empty; three are special graduate level institutions, so their data rows are also empty)
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Thursday, May 09, 2013
Average Graduation Rates of Black Students at Public HBCUs
HBCUs are located in 20 states and 2 territories, mostly in the Southern United States. This note reports the weighted averages of the 6-year graduation rates of black students enrolled in 4-year HBCU programs by states and territories, where the weights are the black enrollments in the HBCUs in each state or territory. It finds that the average graduation rates for public HBCUs in some states and territories are substantially higher than the average graduation rates in other states and territories. These substantial differences suggest the possibility that changes in the public policies of the lagging states and territories might raise the graduation rates of the black students enrolled in the public HBCUs in those states and territories. (Note: Source of black enrollments and graduation rates for the HBCUs = IPEDS Data Center)
Wednesday, May 08, 2013
Graduation Rates of Black Students at HBCUs -- Public & Private by States
The 6-year graduation rates for accredited HBCUs offering bachelors degree programs appear in the following table. The data was obtained from the Website of the IPEDS Data Center
Monday, May 06, 2013
HBCU Enrollments
Enrollments in HBCUs during the Fall 2011 semester are shown in the following table. HBCUs are listed by states, then by public vs. private, then by name. The table shows total enrollments (2), black enrollments (3), percent of total enrollments that are black (4), black male enrollments (5), black female enrollments (6), and percent of black enrollments that are female (7). Source = IPEDS Data Center. Note: IPEDS only provides data for 100 of the 106 HBCUs because some HBCUS are not accredited.
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