By: CeCe Heard.  Montgomery, Alabama  Public  Christian and Baptist  1867, in Marion, Alabama  The school started as the Lincoln Normal School with.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
1 Executive Order (February 26, 2010) Promoting Excellence, Innovation, and Sustainability at Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs)
Advertisements

The Abolitionist and Suffrage Movements …and the work of three women.
Chapter 9: Education in the United States
Isolation and Women STEM Faculty Chrystal A. S. Smith, University of South Florida Penny J. Gilmer, Florida State University Anne Donnelly, University.
The Progressive Movement
SS8H5 The student will explain significant factors that affected the development of Georgia as part of the growth of the United States between 1789 and.
NAACP EDUCATION DEPARTMENT Click here Click here to return to the main page.
Educational Conference Call Series on Institutional Review Boards and Ethical Issues in Research Jointly sponsored by: Community-Campus Partnerships for.
Geography in US Higher Education Growth, Change, and Development Sarah Witham Bednarz Texas A&M University.
1 Educational Conference Call Series on Institutional Review Boards and Ethical Issues in Research Jointly sponsored by: Community-Campus Partnerships.
The Lust for Learning Education and its Reforms. Public education continued becoming more popular States made grade schools –Accept fact government can.
BLACK HISTORY FACTS 1 Feb-Slave trade was started in 1441 by the Portuguese. 2 Feb- The Tuskegee Airmen were the first Black pilots in the armed forces.
Reflective Pathways from Theory to Practice Brewton-Parker College Education Division.
Higher Education Connections ECRC Partnership Council January 30, 2013.
Auburn University’s Auburn University’s AVIATION and SPACE STUDIES INSTITUTE (ASSI) at AUBURN UNIVERSITY An ad hoc committee began discussions regarding.
Historical Black Colleges and Universities. HBCUs HBCUs enroll upwards of 370,000 students and graduate a significant share of all African Americans receiving.
Historically Black Colleges and Universities HBCU’s with an Religious Affiliation.
Howard University Jabal M. Moss Georgia Southern University February 24, 2014 Dr. Wayne Fredrick, Interim President.
PJC Adult High-UWF PDS An Alternative – Professional Development School that depends on community involvement.
Educational System of South Africa. African education includes: Equal access to basic education Opportunities for lifelong learning Language of Instruction:
Part 2 Pages Expanding Public Education
Dr. Matilda A. Evans Michal Ande AAS Final 4/29/13.
Famous People Civil War Events Causes of the Civil War Famous Documents After the Civil War Dates and Concepts
MUW Diversity Plan April 2012 DRAFT 5-Year Strategic Plan.
Black History Month By:Angelo Saccamango. Marcus Garvey Marcus Garvey and his organization, the Universal Negro Improvement Association represent the.
Career & Technical Education (CTE) Group F. CTE in USA What is CTE? History. Areas covered by CTE. Where and How CTE is offered Numbers, funding and opportunities.
African-American Leaders and Educators By: Ellie Folkema.
CISM Site Visit 29 May 2003 Diversity within CISM Ramon Lopez and the CISM Team.
Black History Month Celebrating the achievements of African-Americans
EDU 103 Fall 2009 December. EDU 103 Chapter 5 Education in the United States – Its Historical Roots.
Educator Born in South Carolina Mary McLeod Bethune.
Tuskegee Normal School for Colored Teachers. Tuskegee Normal school for Colored Teachers This historical event took place in Tuskegee, Al. in The.
National YMCA Black/Hispanic Achievers Program Reaching and Serving All People of Color.
The Expansion of Education
QUIZ Correctly head your paper Number from 1 to 10, do not skip lines The Growth of Georgia Quiz.
Daily Life in the Gilded Age Chapter 7 Section 1 Angela Brown.
Mary McLeod Bethune Morgan Perkins Valaria Frazier EDUC-104 April 18 th 2013.
Mary Mcleod Bethune Mary who???  Mary Bethune was the child of former slaves born in South Carolina on July 10,  One of seventeen children.
Evaluate social and political origins, accomplishments and limitations of Progressivism. COS 2b.
PROGRESSIVE MOVEMENT Two influential leaders arose with very opposing philosophies on how to obtain the same goal.
 Which of the following developments do you think is the most important for education?  Kindergarten  Separate Middle school (before it was just part.
Reforming Society The Big Idea Reform movements in the early 1800s affected religion, education, and society. Main Ideas The Second Great Awakening.
Broadening Scholarship Opportunities for Underrepresented Students April 28, :45-3:00pm NPEA Annual Conference.
 The story of Black History Month begins in 1915, half a century after the Thirteenth Amendment abolished slavery in the United States. That September,
 Objective: I can compare and contrast the philosophies of Booker T Washington and WEB Dubois and explain the origins of Jim Crow laws.  Preview: What.
Booker T. Washington Presented by Reed Wolonsky. Background: There is no question that Booker T. Washington was the best- known African American of his.
BOOKER T. WASHINGTON ——AN AFRICAN-AMERICAN EDUCATOR, AUTHOR, ORATOR, AND ADVISOR TO PRESIDENTS OF THE UNITED STATES.
Preparing World-Class Teachers for a Better World.
Why Consider the Community College/HBCU Transfer Pipeline? Historically Black College & University (HBCU) background and history HBCU Facts Why students.
Causes of the Civil War 1. Sectional Debate over: 1.Tariffs 2.Extension of slavery into the territories 3.The nature of the Union (states’ rights) 2.
Discrimination against African Americans History of Racism Racism existed in the US before slavery Led to slavery Grew after slavery ended.
Booker T. Washington By: Alec Hanss. Background Booker Taliaferro Washington Born April 5, 1856 in Virginia White unknown father and slave mother Worked.
The System Of Education in the USA. This project is done by:
COS 2b Evaluate social and political origins, accomplishments and limitations of Progressivism.
The Abolitionist and Suffrage Movements …and the work of three women.
The Background to Modern African American History
Education in the diversity Escape from slavery, which is never planned is succeeded in making the Ignorant man smart.
ORGANIZATIONS SUPPORTING HIGH ABILITY LEARNERS
Horace Mann & Education Reform
DEFENSE ACTIVITY FOR NON-TRADITIONAL EDUCATION SUPPORT (DANTES)
American History Chapter 9: Life at the Turn of the Twentieth Century
Period 2, 5, & 6 We will examine what education was like at the turn century. 8th Grade Test Chapter 8.2 Notes Chapter 8.2 Reading W.E.B. DuBois v. Booker.
Expanding Public Education
Famous People Civil War Events After the Civil War
Life at the Turn of the 20th Century
Joseph B. Berger University of Massachusetts Boston
Ethnicity and Race in the Christian Population of the United States
Life at the Turn of the 20th Century
Chapter 8 - pages Manumission and Gradual Emancipation:
Presenters: Dr. Lena Walton and Dr. Samantha L. Strachan
Presentation transcript:

By: CeCe Heard

 Montgomery, Alabama  Public  Christian and Baptist  1867, in Marion, Alabama  The school started as the Lincoln Normal School with $500 raised by nine freed slaves now known as the Marion Nine, making ASU one of the nation’s oldest institutions of higher education founded for black Americans.

 Huntsville, Alabama  Public  Christian  1875  Taught industrial education and became the “State Normal and Industrial School at Huntsville.”

 Selma, Alabama  Public  Christian  1922  Boasts a student body representing a diversity of geographic, ethnic and socioeconomic backgrounds, as well as the distinctive status as the nation’s only Historically Black Lutheran College or University (HBCU).

 Fairfield, Alabama  Public  Christian  1898  Saw educated leadership as the paramount need in the black community.

 Tuscaloosa, Alabama  Public  Christian  1875

 Tuskegee, Alabama  Public  Christian  1881  “The Pride of the swift, growing South.”

 Talladega, Alabama  Public  Christian  1865  "...We regard the education of our children and youths as vital to the preservation of our liberties, and true religion as the foundation of all real virtue, and shall use our utmost endeavors to promote these blessings in our common country."

 Mobile, Alabama  Public  Christian  1927  Established as an in-service arm of Alabama State College that offered extension courses to African-American elementary and secondary teachers in Mobile.

 Huntsville, Alabama  Private  Christian  1896  To educate the recently-freed African- Americans of the South. Drawing upon its Christian faith and the emancipation of slaves by President Abraham Lincoln in 1863, it believed that “all people are created equal” and deserved the opportunity to learn a trade.

 Decatur, Georgia  Private  Christian  1865  Offers undergraduate, graduate, and professional degrees as well as certificate programs to students of diverse racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic backgrounds.

 Fort Valley, Georgia  Public  Christian  1895  To advance the cause of education with an emphasis on a commitment to the community through a concept known as communiversity.

 Atlanta, Georgia  Private  Christian  1867  Morehouse is an academic community dedicated to teaching, scholarship, and service, and the continuing search for truth as a liberating force.

 Atlanta, Georgia  Private  Methodist Episcopal  1881  The College is proud of its tradition of serving the educational needs of the best and brightest young minds, while simultaneously providing educational support to students who might not otherwise receive the opportunity to compete on the college level.

 Augusta, Georgia  Public  Christian Methodist Episcopal  1869  A school to train Negro teachers and preachers so that they might in turn appropriately address the educational and spiritual needs of the people newly freed from the evils of slavery.

 Atlanta, Georgia  Private  Christian  1881  America's oldest historically Black college for women