Money Is a Major Factor in Why Black Students Drop Out of College

A new report from the Department of Education offers data on why students dropout of college. The report concerns students who entered college in 2003 and dropped out of school by the next year. The data shows that 33 percent of Black men cited financial reasons for leaving college. For Black women, 26 percent said that financial reasons prompted them to leave school.

There was little racial difference between Blacks and Whites  in the percentage of students who cited financial reasons for leaving school. But Hispanic men were far more like to cite money as the reason they left school.

The full report, entitled Higher Education: Gaps in Access and Persistence Study, can be accessed here.

Related Articles

3 COMMENTS

  1. My dad had to drop out of the University of Pittsburgh in 1934 during height of the Great Depression because of a lack of funds/money.
    Even though he was a star member of Pitt’s track & field team they did not come to his rescue.
    Our family was part of the first Great Wave of Southern Migration to the north coming to Pittsburgh in 1901.

  2. The report left out a very important factor. Was it tuition money or living money? Many students get money to go to college but do not get money to live while going. So they drop out. It’s hard to concentrate when you are hungry.

    • KJ: What you have stated is true and you are what you eat. The brain must have good food to nourish the various cells.
      You can’t succeed on diet of potato chips and pop. The brain does not need potato chips and soda pop.

      You must have an adequate supply of the B vitamins along with four substances which are essential to the healthy nucleus of brain cell development and they are as follows: adenine, thymine, cytosine and quanine.
      KJ: These four nutrients are found in multi celluar meats such as liver, calf or lamb brains, sweetbreads, kidneys and in brewers yeast. These excellent meats should be added to the diet daily. Bake or broiled fish rich in Omega III is also good for brain cell nourishment.
      I put my brewer’s yeast in Cranberry juice or in any type of freshly made veggie or fruit juice.
      You don’t have to be rich to eat healthy just smart and intelligent.

Leave a Reply

Get the JBHE Weekly Bulletin

Receive our weekly email newsletter delivered to your inbox

Latest News

North Carolina A&T State University Establishes Doctorate in Pharmacy Pathway Program

The Early Assurance Program will provide North Carolina A&T University students who are interested in pursuing a doctorate in pharmacy with the opportunity for assured admission to the University of North Carolina Eshelman School of Pharmacy.

Five African Americans Appointed to Administrative Positions in Higher Education

The appointments are Courtney Phillips at Louisiana State University, Pamela Richardson at Hampton University, Shani Crayton at Alabama State University, James Ham at North Carolina Central University, and Caroline Ebanks at Columbia University.

In Memoriam: Faith Ringgold, 1930-2024

Ringgold was a mixed media artist, best known for her narrative quilts which centered around African American and women's representation. She was a professor emerita of art with the University of California, San Diego where she taught for 15 years.

Recent Books of Interest to African American Scholars

The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education regularly publishes a list of new books that may be of interest to our readers. The books included are on a wide variety of subjects and present many different points of view.

Featured Jobs