ROANOKE TIMES 
                      Copyright (c) 1997, Roanoke Times

DATE: Thursday, February 27, 1997            TAG: 9702270056
SECTION: NATIONAL/INTERNATIONAL   PAGE: A-6  EDITION: METRO 
DATELINE: WASHINGTON
SOURCE: Cox News Service


WOMEN LEAD BLACK COLLEGE ROLLS HIGHER

The number of black students enrolled in U.S. colleges is at an all-time high, largely because of increasing participation by black women, according to a report released Wednesday by the research arm of the United Negro College Fund.

The report, which compiled various studies of undergraduate and graduate students, is intended to serve as a source of facts for lawmakers from Capitol Hill to City Hall as they develop policies that will affect the education of the upcoming work force.

``The biggest value of this book is that it highlights the areas of greatest need,'' said Education Secretary Richard Riley.

Based on the report's findings, Riley said educators and others should:

* Reach out to black males, whose college enrollment and graduation rates lag well behind black females'.

* Lower the dropout rate of all black freshmen.

* Boost the representation of blacks on the faculties of colleges and universities. Blacks made up only 4.9 percent of college faculty in 1992, the report said.

Among college students, blacks made up a historically high 10.1 percent in the fall of 1994, the latest semester included in the report. Black women were the largest part of that enrollment, representing 6.3 percent of the college students in the United States; black men made up 3.8 percent of the student population.

Black women earned 52,097 bachelor's degrees in 1994 - a 55.4 percent increase from 1977, the earliest year included in the report. Black men earned 30,086 bachelor's degrees in 1994 - a 19.6 percent increase from 1977.

Not all the studies in the report reflected such progress: Other studies found that black students are more likely to drop out in their first year of college than white students and underscored the heavy reliance of black students on financial aid because their families' income is far behind white families'.


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