Column: Child Watch: Black Men Share Keys to their Success
We know the commonly repeated claim that there are more Black men in prison than in college isn’t true. But in 2011, Black men accounted for fewer than 6 percent of undergraduate students and 4 percent of graduate students, though they made up 8.7 percent of 18-29 year olds. Many who go to college never graduate. At a recent symposium co-sponsored by the Children’s Defense Fund and the Educational Testing Service on “Advancing Success for Black Men in College,” the focus was on solutions and how to get more young men to attend and graduate from college. The marvelous opening panel featured four Black men in college sharing their experiences, including the opportunities that helped them most – and the advice they would give to an audience of third grade Black boys.
Shawon Jackson, a rising senior at Princeton University, was quick to credit his parents and the public boarding school he attended an hour away from his Chicago-area home for strong support in getting on the road to college. For Shawon, the QuestBridge program, which identifies talented low-income students and helps support them as they apply to top colleges and universities, made it possible for him to attend Princeton.
Extra support has also given him opportunities to travel and work in Spain and Honduras. He said, “Going to different countries allowed me to develop a different perspective, so by the time I got back to Princeton I was able to say, wow, there’s a world outside of Princeton, and there is a world outside of what I saw growing up.”
Shawon’s advice for young Black boys: “I would tell them that you will make it, and that education is the gateway to whatever you want it to be. I would talk about how it doesn’t matter what your background was, what your parents did or did not do, or what was around your community – if you persevere and if you make education your number one priority, you can quite literally do anything that you want in this world. I would talk about how society may have one expectation for you but that you have to set your own expectations, and if you guide yourself, then you’ll be rewarded in the end.”
Javon Mullings gave credit to the Posse Foundation, which targets youth leaders from public urban high schools and helps send them to partner colleges and universities in small groups, creating a support “posse” of peers on each campus. Javon, the valedictorian of his New York high school, received a scholarship to “Posse Partner” Wheaton College in Massachusetts, where he’s had great opportunities including working in a professor’s lab and a series of outside summer internships, including one at the Federal Reserve and this summer, a research position at Cornell University. Javon said: “Accumulation of knowledge is the accumulation of power, and knowledge can be acquired in multiple ways, not necessarily just in a classroom. And to what Shawon was saying earlier, the opportunities that college provides that you may not necessarily get elsewhere, like study abroad opportunities and the opportunity to meet people from various socioeconomic classes — you learn from these people, you accumulate knowledge, you accumulate power, and then you can make your dreams come true.”
Marvin Perry, as a fourth and fifth grader, was in an all-Black male classroom, in Cleveland, with a Black male teacher who became a role model. He taught Marvin many lessons in and out of the classroom including how to tie a tie and ultimately inspired Marvin to want to become a teacher, too.
He had two pieces of advice for young students: “Put God over your life. That’s the first thing I would tell them. Second . . . Perseverance. No matter how many times you get beat up, just get right back up and keep fighting and keep going.”
Sixto Cancel, a student at Virginia Commonwealth University, spent much of his childhood in the child welfare system with no family financial or emotional support to fall back on. But a financial literacy program sponsored by the Jim Casey Youth Opportunities Initiative and designed to help prepare him for life on his own taught him a critical skill no one else had passed on—a framework for how to make healthy decisions.
His advice: “If it is to be, it’s up to me. You’re going to be dealt cards and it might be very unfair. You might only have three and the guy next to you has 12. But you better play to win, and then stick to those people who are there to help you win.”
Marian Wright Edelman is president of the Children’s Defense Fund whose Leave No Child Behind® mission is to ensure every child a Healthy Start, a Head Start, a Fair Start, a Safe Start and a Moral Start in life and successful passage to adulthood with the help of caring families and communities. For more information go to www.childrensdefense.org.