How Diverse Are HBCUs?

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When you think of Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs), there are likely many terms and phrases that come to mind to describe the important and, indeed, historic work being done in the United States by these institutions of higher education.

But diverse may not be one of them. It should be.

The more than 100 HBCUs are an eclectic mix of private, public, and state-supported institutions. Of the country’s 112 land-grant institutions, 19 of them are HBCUs, including Tuskegee University (shown here), the only private HBCU with that designation. Land-grant institutions were created by federal legislation in 1862 and 1890 with the idea of giving more students the opportunity for affordable higher education in agriculture, liberal arts, military science, and engineering. But the funding for historically white land-grant schools and those serving largely Black populations was never equal. Predominantly white schools were given 30,000 acres of land at their founding, while historically Black schools were not.

HBCUs are also diverse in the size of their student populations. There are HBCUs with enrollments of fewer than 1,000 students—including Stillman College in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, and Tougaloo College in Jackson, Mississippi—and others with enrollments of more than 8,000, including North Carolina A&T State University in Greensboro, Texas Southern University in Houston, and Prairie View A&M University in Prairie View, Texas.

While the vast majority of HBCUs are coeducational, Morehouse College in Atlanta enrolls only men. Spelman College, also in Atlanta, enrolls only women. The two schools operate like brother-sister higher-education institutions, with some joint classes, events, and programs.

Finally, and despite the moniker, the student populations at Historically Black Colleges and Universities are far from exclusively Black. According to the National Center for Education Statistics, 85 percent of all students enrolled at HBCUs in 1976 were Black; in 2021 that number had fallen to 75 percent, reflecting that the educational excellence offered at HBCUs attracts a diverse student population. The relative affordability of tuition and other costs at HBCUs compared with other four-year institutions is another driver of diversity.

While today most HBCUs have large majority Black student populations, not all do. West Virginia State University reports a student population that is about 72 percent white and less than 9 percent Black. Similarly, Bluefield State University, also in West Virginia, has a Black student population of 14 percent and a white student population of 78 percent.