The Fight For Bennett Challenges All of Us To Do Better For Black Women


I was heartbroken to learn today that Bennett College for Women, one of North Carolina’s jewels of higher education and an important institution within the universe of historically black colleges, had lost its accreditation by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools’ Commission on Colleges. While most HBCUs face extraordinary challenges with enrollment trends and financial management, I was certain that even the face of some difficult times, the institution would be able to reclaim its place as an irreplaceable resource for the career training of black women.
We need a school like Bennett to survive. It is the antidote for a society grappling with how to deal with some of the most vile traces of inhumanity in our national DNA; sexism, racism and classism. The women who enter Bennett and depart to lead are infused with a sense of personal excellence that extends in their roles as leaders in their careers, communities and homes.
Very few institutions can do what Bennett does for its graduates and the surrounding community; and you can tell just how important the college remains today in light of this harrowing news by the pouring out of affection and concern from thousands of stakeholders on social media and beyond.
Much in the way that black women face a ‘double whammy’ in the labor force because of their race and gender, historically black women’s colleges have faced the same issues. Spelman College is one of the nation’s best HBCUs, single-sex or co-ed, because it has been able to meld its mission with the growth of Atlanta’s metropolitan identity in culture and industry. It has benefited from stable leadership at the board and presidential levels, has fundraised well and created important partnerships with corporations and the federal government. While it has confronted its share of challenges, these factors have helped the school to grow exponentially over the last decade.
Bennett, without the backdrop of a major metropolitan city like Atlanta, has suffered in the wake of North Carolina’s proliferation of higher education. Greensboro, while developing its imprint as a destination for industry and society, is home to six colleges and universities and two of the state’s fastest growing public institutions in North Carolina A&T and UNC-Greensboro. The availability of scholarships and competitive programs for black women at these schools, combined with the flexibility to create undergraduate and graduate programs in competitive fields, created a nearly impossible equation for Bennett counter, even with all of its history and value.
Historically black colleges are at a perilous crossroads where their leaders must contend with very real issues of debt, student access, political acuity, technological change and intersections of learning and workforce development. Many of our campuses are up to the task of meeting these challenges, but are hindered by a clear lack of resources to adapt their campuses to a higher education market that is quickly becoming defined by sets of outcomes instead of lives changed.
Bennett faculty are committed and more than capable at producing esteemed graduates. Bennett alumnae give at levels that are extraordinary by any definition of alumni participation. Hopefully, college leaders will be able to make this case in an extended period of review and consideration as they formally appeal their accreditation status to SACS in the months ahead.
As a former president, I know what it is like to face sleepless nights in an accreditation review cycle. I know too well the feeling of having to explain to stakeholders the nuances of what accreditation warning and probation means, and working with staff and faculty for endless hours to pull an institution out of these classifications. And I know the joy associated with the work resulting in a full reaffirmation without recommendations.
We’ve lost too many institutions in too short of a period of time. Morris Brown, Saint Paul’s, and Concordia are just a few of the names which stand out to many of us whom have led institutions and who are able to visualize the answer to the question “what if?” What if the entire HBCU community pulled together to imagine how articulation agreements, shared resources and services, and partnerships amongst HBCUs could helps us to avoid this kind of heartbreaking news?
What if we could take a unique position on the concept of merging or consolidating smaller or struggling institutions with larger or more stable schools, instead of allowing outside stakeholders to influence the assets and wealth attached to our campuses, even before closure?
There is a way forward for Bennett and many of our HBCUs. I just pray that we can find it sooner than later.
Dr. Dianne Boardley Suber was the tenth president of Saint Augustine’s University.

10 thoughts on “The Fight For Bennett Challenges All of Us To Do Better For Black Women

  1. The fight for Bennett is a good fight. It has racial and sexism overtones all in it. The school had been producing top graduates for years. I mentioned before that there financial situation was the same as St. Augustine yet Bennett lost its accreditation.

  2. Hoping for the best for Bennett.
    Im hoping for a prosperous resolution to this crisis. It just seem that HBCUs are being lost minute by minute…as mentioned on here. I also hate that SACS had a hand in this…the grim repers of not giving HBCUs chances of working on solutions.
    I agree with the author about the solutions..and if possible, dont use SACS to gain accreditation. It seems to be a rare occurance that the will let it happen.

    1. And unfortunately, there may be more losses in the years to come for similar reasons. Accreditation can’t help when enrollment is down, debts are high and bills are due.

  3. Thank you Sister President Suber for your compelling argument for support of Bennett College. Each of us is called to do all that we can to keep and to strengthen this one of only two historically Black colleges for women in the United States.
    Johnnetta Betsch Cole, President Emerita, Spelman and Bennett Colleges

  4. “Bennett now our voices raise……….True we’ve been throughout the past, True to thee while life shall last…………”
    excerpts, from Bennett College for Women Alma Mater
    Words Carol Cotton
    Music by Edith Player Brown
    We want to thank ALL for support and ideas.
    Dr. Cole, thanks for the lessons you taught us in the past. We still have your play book, you know we’ve been here before. Alumnae mobilizing, stay tune………..looking to February, but most of all BEYOND.

  5. To my HBCU Sisters and Brothers:
    I believe this struggle to be a righteous one but will require vision and capital to resolve. As a Morehouse alum who embraces his Bennett sisters, and works for an HBCU oriented fund, I support the notion of HBCU M&A. This will, however, require visionary leadership from our HBCU leaders (both past and present) and a willingness to pivot towards more innovative approaches.

  6. Know that in times like thes, leader emerge from unlikely places. As a 1993 alum, I want to encourage you all that our alums are not sitting on their hands and we are not resolving ourselves to faith WITHOUT action. NO, we are asking for investments in a legacy that started in 1873 and our story is still emerging. There is much restructuring that must take place and I do not believe that our existence must be melded into that of another institution. We welcome those who can share strategies on sustainability, governance and engagement. The Committee on Progress and Change for Bennett College has emerged and we look forward to working on enriching the fiscal resources for financial stability on behalf of the college. I serve as the chair and can be reached at allroadseducation@gmail.com

  7. Thank you for this compelling narrative. We appreciate you. We are continuing to work for Bennett College. We are praying everyone pitch in! We will work to take it from there.

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