More than 50,000 black students (1 out of every 9 black collegians in the United States) attend the unique group of institutions of higher learning—the black land-grant colleges
Higher education as a field of study has an extensive history in the United States of America. Howev...
This article examines the contributions of Historically Black Colleges and Universities in improving...
Beginning in the post Civil War era, it seemed that African-Americans would be integrated into the s...
In 1890, the Second Morrill Act, an amendment to the First Morrill Act, became law. The Second Morri...
The black land-grant colleges\u27 contributions to developing the rural South are traced back before...
Kentucky was the last state in the South to introduce racially segregated schools and one of the fir...
The progress of Negro Land-Grant Colleges in Mississippi, Missouri, West Virginia and Texas has perh...
Jones and Parks have prepared an interesting and importantly, the poverty rate for black children (i...
Schools for All provides the first in-depth study of black education in Southern public schools and ...
In this dissertation, I seek to understand how adaptations made by a relatively stable set of actors...
Hungry for freedom and knowledge, enslaved Blacks engaged in a massive general strike against slaver...
Throughout the history of the United States individuals and groups have used education as a means to...
In the decades following World War II, access to higher education became an important vehicle for ex...
By the late nineteenth century, white northern missionary societies established a variety of higher ...
The Long Fight for African American Education after the Civil War Educational Reconstruction: Africa...
Higher education as a field of study has an extensive history in the United States of America. Howev...
This article examines the contributions of Historically Black Colleges and Universities in improving...
Beginning in the post Civil War era, it seemed that African-Americans would be integrated into the s...
In 1890, the Second Morrill Act, an amendment to the First Morrill Act, became law. The Second Morri...
The black land-grant colleges\u27 contributions to developing the rural South are traced back before...
Kentucky was the last state in the South to introduce racially segregated schools and one of the fir...
The progress of Negro Land-Grant Colleges in Mississippi, Missouri, West Virginia and Texas has perh...
Jones and Parks have prepared an interesting and importantly, the poverty rate for black children (i...
Schools for All provides the first in-depth study of black education in Southern public schools and ...
In this dissertation, I seek to understand how adaptations made by a relatively stable set of actors...
Hungry for freedom and knowledge, enslaved Blacks engaged in a massive general strike against slaver...
Throughout the history of the United States individuals and groups have used education as a means to...
In the decades following World War II, access to higher education became an important vehicle for ex...
By the late nineteenth century, white northern missionary societies established a variety of higher ...
The Long Fight for African American Education after the Civil War Educational Reconstruction: Africa...
Higher education as a field of study has an extensive history in the United States of America. Howev...
This article examines the contributions of Historically Black Colleges and Universities in improving...
Beginning in the post Civil War era, it seemed that African-Americans would be integrated into the s...