In this episode of "Get Your Paper Straight", Dr. Boyce and George Kilpatrick discuss the economic value of education and the short-coming of athletic dreams for African American males. There is also a reminder of how your education should not stop when you graduate, because the development of your skill set should be a part of your long-term economic plan. Click the image to listen!
Black Enterprise Top Schools
10) Wesleyan University (Middleton, CT)
Tuition and fees: $36,806
Room and Board: $10,130
Wesleyan was one of the first highly selective schools to actively recruit black and other minority students, and in the class entering in 1965 had the first substantial group of minority students, 14 young men -- 13 Blacks and one Latino.
9) University of Pennsylvania (Philadelphia, PA)
Tuition and fees: $35,916
Room and Board: $10,208
According to the university, Penn is America's first university and is the fourth-oldest institution of higher education in the United States.
8) Columbia University (New York, NY)
Tuition and fees: $36,997
Room and Board: $9,098
Columbia University is home to the Pulitzer Prize, which has rewarded outstanding achievement in journalism, literature and music for over a century. Columbia's Graduate School of Journalism was founded by Joseph Pulitzer.
7) Stanford University (Stanford, CA)
Tuition and fees: $34,800
Room and Board: $10,808
Stanford offers strong programs in business management and engineering because of its close location to Silicon Valley. Many Stanford alumni have founded companies associated with technology, such as HP and Google.
6) Hampton University (Hampton, VA)
Tuition and fees: $14,818
Room and Board: $6,746
Under what is now called the Emancipation Oak tree, Mary Smith Peake taught the first classes on September 17, 1861, in defiance of a Virginia law against teaching slaves, free blacks and mulattos to read or write, a law which had cut her own education short years earlier.
5) Spelman College (Atlanta, GA)
Tuition and fees: $18,615
Room and Board: $9,200
Spelman has amassed an endowment fund of over $291 million, and is ranked currently at 75 in the 2008 U.S. News and World Report ranking of all U.S. liberal arts colleges. The 2008 U.S. News and World Report also ranked Spelman first among Historically Black Colleges and/or Universities.
4) Harvard University (Boston, MA)
Tuition and fees: $34,998
Room and Board: $10,662
Founded in 1636 by the colonial Massachusetts legislature, Harvard is the oldest institution of higher learning in the United States. It is also the first and oldest corporation in North America.
3) North Carolina A&T State University (Greensboro, NC)
Tuition and fees: $17,315
Room and Board: $7,370
On February 1, 1960 four distinguished freshmen sparked the civil rights movement of the south. Ezell Blair (Jibreel Khazan), Joseph McNeil, Franklin McCain, and David Richmond "sat-in" at an all white eating establishment (Woolworth's)and demanded equal service at the lunch counter.
2) Howard University (Washington, DC)
Tuition and fees: $14,020
Room and Board: $6,976
Howard University is the number-one producer of African American Ph.D.s in the United States. It is often known as the Black Harvard.
1) Florida A&M University (Tallahassee, FL)
Tuition and fees: $14,465
Room and Board: $5,492
In the fall of 1997, FAMU was selected as the TIME Magazine-Princeton Review "College of the Year" and was cited in 1999 by Black Issues in Higher Education for awarding more baccalaureate degrees to African-Americans than any institutions in the nation.


Comments: (3)
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By: monique on 5/10/2009 5:24AM
I need my children to understand the value of education. There is alot of opportunity in America if people go out and get it.
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By: East Dream on 5/14/2009 9:51PM
Thank you for telling us about your tenure situation at Syracuse U. I am extremely proud that you are airing all of these colleges dirty laundry in public. Because we have children to feed, parents to care for, and family members to assist, we often put their issues above our own inner beliefs and principals. It is so admirable that you have risen above all of the crap, and are taking a stand against these large institutions that have manipulated us for years.
I am proud that you will not back down--even when they deny you tenure which you have spent years earning. I am proud that you are exposing all of the back door dirty deals that are struck, while these institutions publicize how they help their communities. I am proud that you are just being you. My prayers are with you.
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By: Charles on 5/15/2009 8:52AM
Try to get kids in a good learning environment.Hanging out with knuckleheads wont get them anywhere nice. Peer presure works both ways . A good tutor is worth their weight in gold also exposure to different industries is a must. Show kids that the worker who is working the hardest is not always the highest paid, the highest paid did all their sweating in a classroom somewhere. The last thing I want to add is not all people are indoor office workers .
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