Raleigh, N.C. – For the first time ever in the South, blacks are as well-represented on college campuses as they are in the region’s population as a whole – something not yet true of the country overall.
The milestone is noted in a fact book to be released today by the Southern Regional Education Board, a nonprofit that promotes education.
In the 16 states measured, the number of blacks enrolled in colleges has risen by more than half over the last decade. They now make up 21 percent of college students and 19 percent of the overall population.
The number represents progress, but it also has to be seen in context. A major contributing factor is the South’s rapidly growing Hispanic population, which has reduced the proportion of the population that is black and thereby made the milestone easier to reach.
Educators also stressed that the number should not obscure the persistent achievement gaps affecting blacks both in the South and nationally. In particular, black enrollment rates for college-age students, while improving, still lag well behind those of whites, as do the graduation rates of black college students.
With a college degree now almost a prerequisite for high-paying jobs, those achievement gaps pose an economic threat – and the South will be on the cutting edge of that. In 2005, about 61 percent of public high school graduates in the South were white, the education board said, but by 2018 that figure is expected to be 45 percent.
“We’ve made tremendous progress; don’t get me wrong,” board president Dave Spence said. But, he added, unless achievement gaps narrow, “we already are in trouble, but we’ll be in more trouble seven or eight years down the road.”
In the 16 states measured, about 1.1 million black students were enrolled in college in the fall of 2005, 52 percent more than a decade earlier.
The increase has come largely at new and expanding public, traditionally white universities and two-year colleges rather than at historically black colleges, which for many years shouldered nearly all the burden of higher education for Southern blacks. Many of those schools still exist, but their share of black enrollment in the region has slipped from 26 percent to 19 percent over the last decade.
The number of Hispanics in higher education in the South has also shot up sharply over the last decade – by about 71 percent to about 552,000 in the region the board studied. But unlike for blacks, it remains well below the proportion of Hispanics in the region’s population.
Nationally, 25 percent of Hispanics ages 18 to 24 attend college, compared with 33 percent of blacks and 44 percent of whites.



