Success Factors of Young African-American Males at a Historically Black College
By (Author) Marilyn Ross
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th March 1998
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Higher education, tertiary education
Ethnic studies
Gender studies, gender groups
378.19829960730759381
Hardback
160
At a time when American society is desperately seeking to create hope for inner city black youth, this study serves as a tool to encourage those responsible for teaching and socializing young African-American males, who may feel they have little chance for success. The study involved 17 African-American male students at a historically black college in Miami, Florida. These students had great desire to achieve and did so despite daunting obstacles such as neighborhoods plagued with drugs, gangs, and crime. Interviewing students at the moment in their lives when they had successfully advanced beyond their environment, the author helps them to analyze their past in an honest manner. The case studies of the individuals reveal that family is the most relevant factor in the student's success; particularly, the presence of one person who cares and encourages the young man is vital. In President Clinton's speech to the NAACP in July 1997, he remarked, I am tired of being told that children cannot succeed because of the difficulties of their circumstances. All we do is consign them to staying in the same circumstances. It is wrong. Through the stories of these students who have overcome their odds, this book can serve as an inspiration for younger African-American males to prevail over their own hardships.
Marilyn Ross offers a window into student experiences at an institution that is not widely written about in the student affairs field....The strength of the book is its focus on African American history, particularly as it relates to African American women. With some 43% of African American women high school graduates enrolled in U.S colleges and universities(Harvey, 2002), it is imperative for practitioners to learn more about African American history. Ross' book may assist the field in understanding this history as well as the present-day struggles that students overcome to be successful in college. For these reasons, Success Factors is worth reading.-Journal of College Student
Ross offers a naturalistic study that may serve as inspiration for a successful life for young African American males and for black male students from outside the United States....Researchers, faculty, and professors.-Choice
"Ross offers a naturalistic study that may serve as inspiration for a successful life for young African American males and for black male students from outside the United States....Researchers, faculty, and professors."-Choice
"Marilyn Ross offers a window into student experiences at an institution that is not widely written about in the student affairs field....The strength of the book is its focus on African American history, particularly as it relates to African American women. With some 43% of African American women high school graduates enrolled in U.S colleges and universities(Harvey, 2002), it is imperative for practitioners to learn more about African American history. Ross' book may assist the field in understanding this history as well as the present-day struggles that students overcome to be successful in college. For these reasons, Success Factors is worth reading."-Journal of College Student
MARILYN J. ROSS is Professor of Higher Education at Florida Memorial College in Miami. /e