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How these HBCU presidents fixed their colleges’ financial futures

Walter Kimbrough knows about endowments. He raised Dillard University’s from about $50 million to $105 million between 2012-2022, during the years he served as president. He built interest in Dillard by sharing its story.

“When I first got to Dillard and I found out Dillard was No. 2 in the country for producing African Americans who get undergraduate degrees in physics, I told that everywhere,” he says. “We have to tell data-driven stories.”

Why We Wrote This

Historically Black Colleges and Universities have grappled with a long history of being ignored financially. What’s different today, several presidents say, is that people outside of HBCU circles are starting to notice the inequities.

Post-pandemic, colleges nationwide are facing an imperative: Change trajectory. Enrollment is down and falling, and Pew’s 2023 Parenting in America survey found that only 41% of parents say it’s important for their children to have a college degree – down from 94% in 2012.

But for the 101 accredited Historically Black Colleges and Universities, this moment is particularly portentous. Undergrad enrollment is up 2.5%, compared with a decline of 4.2% for colleges overall. And although HBCU funding is not a monolith, several presidents interviewed for this story say, their schools are used to creating their own success recipes.

“My criticism has always been that HBCUs lean into their platitudes of, ‘We’re a family environment, your professor knows you, or we turn lemons into lemonade,’ but it’s time to show that lemonade,” says Dr. Kimbrough. “If you did something, we gotta show it, and that will get people excited.”

Post-pandemic, colleges nationwide are facing an imperative: Change trajectory. Enrollment is down and falling, and Pew’s 2023 Parenting in America survey found that only 41% of parents say it’s important for their children to have a college degree – down from 94% in 2012. Even before COVID-19, smaller colleges from Green Mountain to Mount Ida already were closing or being bought out by larger institutions that wanted campus real estate but not their professors or students.

But for the 101 accredited Historically Black Colleges and Universities in the United States, this moment is particularly portentous. Undergrad enrollment is up 2.5%, compared with a decline of 4.2% for colleges overall – one of the only bright spots noted in the 2022 National Student Clearinghouse. While the pandemic dealt blows to some colleges that have never recovered, HBCUs say they were able to make use of the shared relief to do everything from covering lost wages to forgive their students’ debt. 

And although HBCU funding is not a monolith, several presidents interviewed for this story say, their schools are used to creating their own success recipes in the midst of the larger issue of systematic underfunding on the state and federal level since their founding.

Why We Wrote This

Historically Black Colleges and Universities have grappled with a long history of being ignored financially. What’s different today, several presidents say, is that people outside of HBCU circles are starting to notice the inequities.

Some say this contrasts with predominantly white institution counterparts, which have received a disproportionate share of government funds and an abundance of private and philanthropic donations. What’s different today, they say, is that people outside of HBCU circles are starting to notice the inequities. And new support from alumni and non-alumni alike is beginning to help some schools dig out of a long history of being overlooked financially.

“You should be giving them more money,” says Marybeth Gasman, associate dean for research in the Graduate School of Education at Rutgers University, and an HBCU researcher.

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