Cee who said that the kids can't go to school? My point is I don't think HBCUs should be letting in the Ray Rays and Pookie's of the world who see our schools as a last resort anyway. These are the kids that are affecting our graduation and rentention rates, not engineers, part-time students, or working students. If they goofed off in high school and have a 1.6 GPA they should be sent to a community college for at least the first year before coming to our institution. That gives them the opportunity to mature and we don't have to waste resources on a student that really is not interested in obtaining a degree. Do we keep tabs on them? Yes and I hope we encourage them to come back to our institutions, but I for one am sick of us allowing the kid in who wakes up one day and decides that they want to go to college because it is the cool thing to do. Kids with those types of attitudes should use the community college system until they mature. HBCUs only have limited resources as it is, so why waste them on a kid that really does not want to be there and/or has no intention of gaining a college education? While I don't believe in the misconstrued rentention and graduation numbers because our large transfer populations are not counted, I do realize that we have to change in some regards. I applaud AAMU for taking a chance on the kid, TSU and every other HBCU in the SWAC has those stories, which we should be proud of. But for every kid that we admit under the open admission clause that does make it, there is twice as many that fail simply because they should not have been there in the first place. I have a little cousin who is a prime example. She played me around this time two years ago when I was helping her get into TSU about how she wanted to go to college when she really just wanted to get out of the country and move to Houston. At the time, I did not know her GPA was a 1.6 and she was not admitted. Her GPA was even to low to get admitted into the summer bridge program. I made a phone call to vouch for her and they let her in. She flunked out in a year and a half. Why? Because after I went and spoke with her high school teachers, she was not ready for college level work. I felt like an idiot and realized then that if she wanted to go to school, she should have gone the community college route first and there is nothing wrong with that. The problem with us is we are too prideful to suggest our kids go to Juco or techinical school when they are not capable or willing to do the work. Addressing your last assumption, trust me as militant as I am I know not all white kids are not going to college with great grades. They are worse at nepotism and making exceptions for their own than we are. I am far from spoiled and I take pride in reaching back and helping kids from my hometown consider HBCUs and college in general that would have never considered it before.
There is no way around this point: A 2.4 or 2.5 GPA and a 17 ACT score is not hard to get at all and regardless of what you think, HBCUs were not created to serve the Ray Ray's and Pookies that we tend to cater to now. Yes Ray Ray and Pookie need a trade/skill to be productive citizens, but if they don't have at least the minimum to get into a summer bridge program, then they should head to their local community college and/or trade school. Then transfer to AAMU the following year once they mature and get serious about their education.