Project 21 Offers Recommendations Complementary to Trump Administration Move to Help Black Students Succeed
Washington DC - Black students will be more likely to succeed in higher education thanks to new action by the Trump Administration against race preferences in school admissions say members of the
Project 21 black leadership network who offer additional guidance toward the same goal.
Ive always felt that acceptance to higher education should be merit-based and means-tested. I believe President Trump is wise to rescind the aggressive Obama-era affirmative action directive for the use of race in student admissions said Project 21 member
Dr. Carol M. Swain a former professor at Vanderbilt University and Princeton University in a
video statement. This Obama policy places students in situations where they are doomed to fail become embittered by rising debt and frustrated with the mismatch between abilities and expectations. There are better approaches to educating minority students that are more likely to lead them to their long-term success - and available at a much broader range of institutions.
Project 21 Co-Chairman
Horace Cooper a former professor of constitutional law at George Mason University and senior counsel to congressional leadership added: In the 21st century we shouldnt be making race a basis for who gets into school and who doesnt. The Supreme Court has never held that affirmative action in admissions should be a generic remediation tool for all past racial injustice. Such an approach is no better than the injustice of segregation-based school admissions. The Obama Administration pressured schools to do just that. Now President Trump is moving us away from that approach back to the color-blind? vision of Dr. Martin Luther King.
Cooper addressed this issue on the Fox New Channels
The Ingraham Angle on July 2.
The Trump Administration
rolled back guidance issued by the Obama Administrations Justice and Education departments that suggested achieving a diverse student body was a compelling interest for institutions of higher education. This action by the Trump Administration does not prohibit the use of race preferences but it does remove any perception that schools not abiding by the previous guidance could incur future government sanctions.
As a black college student I feel proud knowing I was admitted due to my academic merit and extracurricular accomplishments rather than my skin color said Project 21 member
Stone Washington a rising senior at Clemson University. Instead of admitting students solely on the preference of race to appear diverse colleges should admit students for superior academic qualifications. Schools continuing race-based admissions discrimination while failing to improve the dwindling graduation rate for black students deserve to face consequences.
Project 21 recently released its
Blueprint for a Better Deal for Black America that recommends schools be required to meet minimum graduation rate standards for both general and minority student populations to be eligible for federal student financial aid among other ideas. The Blueprint is Project 21s 57-point plan for removing barriers blocking blacks from empowerment and ensuring they have their chance to attain the American dream.
Colleges are currently are admitting black students who are sometimes unprepared for rigorous college environments Project 21 members assert. Blacks are sometimes accepted with lower SAT and ACT scores fewer AP course credits and lower high school GPAs than their counterparts. Project 21 members say the situation is worsened by colleges that do not provide black students with individualized support to overcome the deficiencies of their K-12 educations. This failure is reflected in six-year graduation rate
statistics. Just 38 percent of blacks earn their four-year college degree after six years. By comparison 62 percent of whites 63.2 percent of Asians and 45.8 percent of Hispanics receive their degrees within six years.
Admissions policies rooted in race preferences set black students up to fail because they only focus on the first day of class. Theres no true investment in students success said Project 21 Co-Chairman
Council Nedd II a former Washington D.C. schoolteacher. In its Blueprint for a Better Deal for Black America Project 21 recommends linking a college or universitys ability to qualify for federal student aid programs with a minimum graduation rate. It also suggests stopping schools from encouraging segregated behavior so true diversity can be achieved on campus. The goal should be a students success not politically correct statistics.
Among the proposals in Project 21s
Blueprint for giving black college students a better deal by promoting their success are:
- Incentivizing schools to provide black students the support they need by requiring schools to meet minimum graduation rate standards to qualify for federal financial aid programs.
- Providing additional funding to improve the infrastructure of renovate and update Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) by reprogramming existing funding for colleges - provided the HBCUs commit to meeting the same minimum graduation standards required of all colleges receiving federal financial aid.
- Ending policies that encourage segregation by restricting federal aid to colleges and universities that operate separate housing recreation facilities or student centers on the basis of race.
Project 21 a leading voice of black conservatives for over 25 years is sponsored by the
National Center for Public Policy Research. Its members have been quoted interviewed or published over 40000 times since the program was created in 1992.
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