From Virginia, Kentucky, Tenn,NC, SC, GA, Fla, Ala,Miss, LA; there are probably close to 50 state Universities.
I would expect that all have black students; Most of those black students come from the local market; not imported from elsewhere across the country.
Then look at how many that are not recruited for sports actually graduate?
And that does not even count the intended black colleges or the private schools.
Blacks can make it; it is others that feel that the blacks should be held back because others in the black community do not want to push forward.
Military, Business, Politics, Science - all have succeeded and can be role models showing that if a black wants to try; the opportunity is there to succeed. IT may take some perseverance and a little luck; but unless you try; you wil not succeed.
It is the fear of failure that creates a perceived need for AA; a crutch to keep others handicapped by saying that one can not succeed on an playing field; that the game has to be rigged in the blacks' favor.
We were not talking about modern day America, we were talking about blacks being barred access to education by whites during times of segregation. More specifically, we were discussing the point that the US Government used to endorse the idea that blacks were predisposed to be intellectually inferior to whites...
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But anyway, I'm from Detroit. There are probably about 5 or 6 major CC and Universities around the area. However, many of the High Schoolers in Detroit either don't finish or they don't make it to college.
My mother pulled me out of Detroit schools when I was 8 years old because they were so bad. Some of these schools, the students learn nothing. She actually made me finish 8th grade in a Detroit Middle school because I go in trouble at my own school for being a knucklehead teenager. That 8th grade year was so tough for me because it was a complete 180 from the schools I had access to. For starters, the only teacher I learned anything from was my homeroom teacher. He taught Social Studies and English in the morning to us and then we went off to some other bullshit classes where we learned absolutely nothing. My classmates? Tyrannts, atleast the bulk of them. There were only a few kids in class that actually did the work. There were two girls that sat near me, one in front and one behind that hated my guts because I participated in class. The girl behind me, Shaina, was a bitch to me in practically every class we had. For no reason at all other than I didn't act up and I just did my work. When that year was finally over, I went to high school back in my neck of the woods and I never got in trouble again (well..until I was a senior, lol)
I turned on the news the other day to hear a report about a student who complained to the school board in Detroit that he did not have books for his classes and that some of his classes did not have permanent teachers. They (the news) went to the school and found many of the students being held in the gym for hours because there were no teachers. Either they were all in the gym, or they were leaving school early to go home. It was disgusting.
So no...going to HS doesnt give you a shot at college. This is not necessarily true for everyone.
Detroit's public schools have been on the outs for YEARS now. If you live in Detroit and you want your kid to get a quality education in High School with a guaranteed shot at College..there are 3 high schools in Detroit you can choose from. Renaissance, Cass Tech, and King High School. The only 3 nationally recognized High Schools in Detroit with a high turnover rate for college admission. You have to be really smart ("Smart" as in good enough grades from middle school) to get into these schools or atleast have a good recommendation put in for you. There are maybe a few hundred spots a year...there are over a thousand HS kids in Detroit.
Isnt that sad? I'm just glad I'd moved out to the suburbs and had access to FAR better schools before I was in Middle School.
For me, College Admission was guaranteed, I had great test scores, competitive transcripts, and teachers who believed in me and wrote recommendations. But, I also didn't get to school in Detroit...so I had a fighting chance.
The average kid in Detroit doesn't get that.
In Tennessee, any student graduating high school has a shot at admission. Automatic admission requires one of:
a minimum imum 3.0 GPA
a minimum composite ACT of 22 (SAT of 1020)
a minimum 2.7 GPA and minimum ACT of 19 (SAT of 900)
One can still apply and be accepted without any of these, but any of these three things guarantees an automatic admission. And all that is for every resident of Tennessee, before any affirmative action.
By the way, it might surprise you to learn that the South is no longer segregated. Anyone can live anywhere she can afford, regardless of race. It's been that way for the last half century. Gettum clue, young lady.
Those are easy to meet standards!
Also, I never said the South was still Segregated. We were talking about history, remember? Before you tell me to get a clue, how about you go back and examine the subject matter of the earlier posts. It was pretty clear I was talking about America during WWII. Hence the conversation about the Tuskegee Airmen.