1st Edition

Retaining African Americans in Higher Education Challenging Paradigms for Retaining Students, Faculty and Administrators

Edited By Lee Jones Copyright 2001

    Retention of African Americans on campus is a burning issue for the black community, and a moral and financial one for predominantly white institutions of higher education. This book offers fresh insights and new strategies developed by fifteen scholars concerned by the new climate in which affirmative action is being challenged and eliminated.This is the first book devoted specifically to retention of African Americans in higher education, and is unique in addressing the distinct but inter-related concerns of all three affected constituencies: students, faculty and administrators. Each is considered in a separate section.The student section shifts attention from, to paraphrase McNairy, "fixing the student" to focussing on higher education's need to examine and, where appropriate, revise policies, curriculum, support services and campus climate. Responding to the new agenda shaped by the opponents of affirmative action, but rejecting the defensive "x percent solutions" espoused by its proponents, this book puts forward new solutions that will provoke debate. Section II begins with a survey of the literature on African American administrators, and presents a Delphi study of twelve administrators to provide an understanding of pathways and barriers to success. The contributors then consider the importance of developing community support and creating alliances, the role of mentoring, and the setting of clear expectations between the individual and the institution.Starting with the recognition that African Americans represent less than five percent of full-time faculty, the chapters in the final section examine the effects of the dismantling of affirmative action, the consequences of faculty salaries trailing more lucrative non-academic employment, the declining enrollment of students of color, the politics of promotion and tenure, and issues of identity and culture. The book concludes by stressing the roles that parents, faculty and administrators must play to empower African American students to take responsibility for their own academic performance.This is a compelling, controversial and constructive contribution to an issue of national importance.

    PART ONE: RETAINING AFRICAN-AMERICAN STUDENTS I. CREATING AN AFFIRMING CULTURE TO RETAIN AFRICAN-AMERICAN STUDENTS DURING THE POSTAFFIRMATIVE ACTION ERA IN HIGHER EDUCATION 2. REEXAMINING THE EDUCATIONAL PIPELINE FOR AFRICAN-AMERICAN STUDENTS 3. THE POLICIES AND POLITICS OF RETENTION AND ACCESS OF AFRICAN-AMERICAN STUDENTS IN PUBLIC WHITE INSTITUTIONS 4. ALTERNATIVES TO RACE-BASED ADMISSIONS IN HIGHER EDUCATION: EXAMINING X-PERCENT PLANS IN CALIFORNIA, TEXAS, AND FLORIDA 5. DEVELOPING ACADEMIC WARRIORS: THINGS THAT PARENTS, ADMINISTRATORS, AND FACULTY SHOULD KNOW PART TWO: RETAINING AFRICAN-AMERICAN ADMINISTRATORS 6.A NEW TEST FOR DIVERSITY: RETAINING AFRICAN­AMERICAN ADMINISTATORS AT PREDOMINANTLY WHITE INSTITUTIONS 7.STRATEGIES FOR OVERCOMING THE BARRIERS OF BEING AN AFRICAN-AMERICAN ADMINISTRATOR ON A PREDOMINANTLY WHITE UNIVERSITY CAMPUS 8.RETAINING AFRICAN-AMERICAN ADMINISTRATORS: A SUBCONSCIOUS DELUGE OF NEGLECT OR A CONSCIOUS SUBTERFUGE TO REJECT? REFLECTIONS: DEVELOPING AN AFRICAN CENTER IN THE ACADEMY; WHEN SERVICES ARE NEEDED BUT NOT RESPECTED; PART THREE: RETAINING AFRICAN-AMERICAN FACULTY 9. HOW TO RETAIN AFRICAN-AMERICAN FACULTY DURING TIMES OF CHALLENGE FOR HIGHER EDUCATION 10. REDEFINING AND REFINING SCHOLARSHIP FOR THE ACADEMY: STANDING ON THE SHOULDERS OF OUR ELDERS AND GIVING CREDENCE TO AFRICAN-AMERICAN VOICE AND AGENCY 11. IDENTITY, PURPOSE, AND IMPACT: BEBOP INNOVATORS AS INTELLECTUALS AND MODELS FOR AFRICAN-AMERICAN ACADEMIC SUCCESS 12. RETHINKING W.E.B. DUBOIS' "DOUBLE CONSCIOUSNESS":IMPLICATIONS FOR RETENTION AND SELF-PRESERVATION IN THE ACADEMY 13. THE POLITICS OF TENURE AND PROMOTION OF AFRICAN-AMERICAN FACULTY 14. ORGANIZING THE STRUCTURE OF THE UNIVERSITY TO ACHIEVE SUCCESS IN RECRUITING AND RETAINING AFRICAN AMERICANS IN HIGHER EDUCATION

    Biography

    Lee Jones is Associate Dean for Academic Affairs and Instruction and Associate Professor of Educational Leadership and Policy Studies at the College of Education, The Florida State University.

    "White academics who seek social justice need to read this book and act on it. Its fourteen articles include statistics, political critique, personal agony, motivational reflection, and detailed proposals. This is not another detached study of someone else's 'problem.' In this book Black academics address directly the painful inequities which institutional and personal racism creates in higher education. The [author's] recommendations hold out the hope of developing the internal strength to withstand the social contradictions of the American economic and political system. If the book has a flaw, it's the title, which is far drier than the content of the book it names. The statistics and analyses are all here, but some selections such as Kipchoge Kirkland's 'Dual Consciousness: A Brother's Response to the Academy' could also be a hit on BET. The passion, the pain, and the hope make this book far more readable than many others produced for academic audiences. I already have plans for using it at my college. I hope others will do the same."

    Teachers College Record

    "[This is] a timely and novel approach to a critical topic. Original thinking is needed because, despite numerous suggestions for closing the gap, retention in higher education continues to be lower for African Americans than for whites. This book makes several important contributions to our understanding of the issues....Most of the authors appropriately recognize that retention is a process that involves transitions between different positions and statuses. (A) strength of this work is that, consistent with Jones' stated goals, most authors conclude their essays with practical recommendations. Taken together, these recommendation offer a comprehensive assessment of the issues influencing the retention of African American students, faculty and administrators."

    The Journal of Higher Education

    "This book represents diverse and proactive discussion of one of the most important issues in higher education."

    Alexander W. Astin, Allan M. Carter Professor & Director, Higher Education Research Institute

    UCLA

    "This book is one of the few current resources available that engages issues for students, faculty and administrators in one volume. The chapters address a variety of important perspectives and approaches to continuing challenges facing African Americans in the higher education of the 21st century."

    Darryl G. Smith, Professor

    Claremont Graduate University, School of Educational Studies

    "This refreshingly clear and focussed book presents a diverse and comprehensive Afro centric discussion of issues related to the access and retention of African-American faculty, administrators, and students in higher education. This invaluable resource should be required reading for educators and others who are interested in better understanding the many challenges that African-Americans face in higher education."

    M. Rick Turner, Dean, Office of African-American Affairs

    University of Virginia

    "This book provides a strong but balanced accounting of the who, why, and what of the academy. It lays out unrefutable evidence showing that African Americans are missing from the academy's faculty, student and administrative ranks. It demonstrates a keen understanding of what colleges and universities must do to remedy this situation."

    Mimi Wolverton, Associate Professor, Department of Educational Leadership and Counseling Psychology, College of Education

    Washington State University

    "This is an important contribution, in large part because the authors use a balanced, reasoned, well-documented approach to illuminate the key issues that must be addressed to promote the success of African Americans in higher education."

    George D. Kuh, Professor and Director, National Survey of Student Engagement, Center for Post secondary Research and Planning

    Indiana University

    "This book makes valuable additions to the sparse literature on the status of the African American faculty administrators and students in higher education. The practical suggestions for retention can be implemented by any institution to promote success."

    Barbara Mann, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Higher Education and Director of Mel Hardee Center

    Florida State University