Albany State University’s Effort to Boost Black Male College Enrollments
Filed in HBCUs on October 16, 2017
The results are in for the first cohort of students who participated in a mentoring
program operated by the Center for the African American Male at Albany State University
in Georgia. Four years ago, 34 young men joined the program aimed at increasing the
college enrollment rate of young Black males in the Dougherty County School System.
The students participated in one-hour sessions each day at high school with students,
staff, and faculty affiliated with the Center for the African American Male. The 34
students also participated in other activities geared toward preparing them for college
and life.
Of the original 34 young Black men in the program, 23 students enrolled in college
this fall, including nine at Albany State University. Another six students in the
group joined the military.
Antonio Leroy, director of the Center for the African American Male, stated that “when
we surround our kids with people who care so much about their present situation, their
potential, their future moving forward, and our hearts are in it, you develop a relationship.
Students want to know you have a vested interest in their development, and we can
show them their brightest future now.”
Leroy added, “we’re developing leaders, we’re developing guys who have a higher moral
compass, guys who understand the power of reaching up for help and reaching back to
help.”
The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education © 2017.