FSU nation's best in bridging racial graduation gap

<p>This is noteworthy about FSU’s CARE program.</p>

<p>*While many colleges and universities are struggling with a so-called graduation gap, Florida State University is receiving national attention for its record high graduation rate of African-American students.</p>

<p>More than 72 percent of African-American students —who make up 12 percent of FSU’s student body —graduate within six years, thanks largely to the efforts of FSU’s Center for Academic Retention and Enhancement (CARE). Nationally, fewer than half of African-American students who enroll in college graduate within six years.</p>

<p>“We don’t have a secret formula,” said FSU Provost and Executive Vice President Lawrence G. Abele. “What we have is a comprehensive program that is dedicated to student success. A program like ours involves a major commitment by the university, but the return on our investment is huge.”</p>

<p>FSU’s success was highlighted in a recent report released by Education Sector, a nonpartisan think tank based in Washington. “Graduation Rate Watch: Making Minority Student Success a Priority,” singled out FSU, remarking that no other large public universities have been able to match its success. “Many aren’t even close,” the report said.</p>

<p>The Education Sector report used federal data to identify universities with small or nonexistent gaps between the graduation rates of white students and black students as well as those with large gaps.</p>

<p>Following the release of the report, news media, including U.S. News and World Report, the Chronicle of Higher Education, Diverse Issues in Higher Education and the Tampa Tribune, followed up with stories about FSU’s ability to buck the national trend with CARE. The center provides preparation, orientation and academic and personal support to students who are the first in their family to attend college or face other economic, cultural or educational circumstances. CARE begins reaching out to students in middle and high school and assists those who chose to attend Florida State until they graduate.</p>

<p>“Not all of our African-American students participate directly in CARE, nor are all CARE students African-American,” said Dean of Undergraduate Studies Karen Laughlin. “But the efforts of this program also have a ripple effect throughout the campus, creating an atmosphere that is known to be supportive for first-generation and minority students.”</p>

<p>Those who participate in CARE have the benefit of strong, peer mentoring;
small sections of select freshman-level courses in English, math, history, speech and literature; a study lab staffed with about 25 tutors focusing on English, math and the sciences; ongoing academic advising and personal counseling; and advocacy and referral services.</p>

<p>The CARE program is open to all students who meet certain criteria. About 65 percent of its participants are African-American.*</p>

<p>For the rest, see: [Florida</a> State University](<a href=“Florida State University”>Florida State University)</p>

<p>Seems oddly political to mention FSU when UF has more black students and still graduates them at 71%. Hmmmm, me thinks someone who wrote the article has ties to FSU???</p>

<p>The numbers are 70.7 for Florida and 71.5% for FSU, which is 8 tenths of 1 percent difference…statistically insignificant.</p>

<p>[The</a> Education Trust - Closing the Achievement Gap](<a href=“http://www.■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■/search1a.aspx?InstitutionID=134130]The”>http://www.■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■/search1a.aspx?InstitutionID=134130)</p>

<p>[The</a> Education Trust - Closing the Achievement Gap](<a href=“http://www.■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■/search1a.aspx?institutionid=134097]The”>http://www.■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■/search1a.aspx?institutionid=134097)</p>

<p>What IS signifigant is the overall graduation rates of 68.3% for FSU and 79.4% for UF. I think it’s a problem that FSU is graduating Blacks at a higher rate than the university overall and they still feel the need to heavily fund programs to help blacks graduate. No one else sees this as a problem? Is this a responsible use of the tax money of the good workers of Florida?</p>

<p>The university, in the ever-competitive world of higher education, elects to push this percentage, which still is higher than UF, even if the difference is small. </p>

<p>FSU’s emphasis, from what I have read, is in attracting students from families where no one has attended college before. I’m not too sure I agree with that as an FSU alumnus and have written to the Administration about it. I was told that FSU could easily improve FTIC stats, but they’d have a greater number of white females from wealthy families than they want. </p>

<p>Does UF include IFAS expenditures in calculating Student Related Expenditures/FTE? I find it surprising UF has such a larger number than FSU. Knowing that IFAS is distributed all over Florida and is not always related to instruction on the Gainesville campus, that could be a bit of fluff. </p>

<p>It seems to suggest those dollars relate to education on the campus, not in every one of Florida’s 67 counties, where IFAS is located.</p>