(Black PR Wire) The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has awarded Dr. Rebecca Harris-Smith the Florence Nightingale Medal, the highest international distinction...

The legislation President Donald Trump signed into law on July 4—celebrated by Republican Sen. Tim Scott as a milestone of “fiscal responsibility” and “opportunity”—is,...

(Dallas College) — Dallas College is proud to an​nounce that Dr. Madeline Burillo-Hopkins was unanimously elected to serve on the Council for Higher Education...

People in the News

Saturday, July 12, 2025

People in the News

Saturday, July 12, 2025

Black students’ graduation rates improve in California survey

Sacramento Observer

Staff Report
(CALMATTERS) – More Black Californians are graduating from college in the wake of key legislative and educational reforms, even as significant disparities in Black and white graduation rates persist, according to a Tuesday report from the nonpartisan research center Campaign for College Opportunity. For example, Black CSU students’ four-year graduation rate doubled over the past decade to reach 20%, even as the gap in Black and White CSU students’ graduation rates grew to 25%, the report found.
(Gift Habeshaw / Unsplash)

One reform that helped put Black students on a faster graduation path was a 2017 law that largely allowed community college students to take transfer-level classes without first taking remedial courses — even though tens of thousands of students are still taking unnecessary remedial classes, CalMatters’ Mikhail Zinshteyn found.

Other key findings from the report:
• The number of Black applicants to the UC system shot up 20% after the Board of Regents eliminated the use of the SAT and ACT in admissions. UCLA and UC Berkeley saw a 50% spike.
• More than 50% of Black students entering UC since 2012 have graduated in four years or less, though there’s a 20% gap in Black and White students’ UC graduation rates.
• 26% of Black Californians have a bachelor’s degree — a number researchers want to see reach 60% by 2030.

NDG 4/1: Garland candidates, NAACP look to the future in panel discussion

Garland candidates, NAACP look to the future in panel discussion

NDG 3/11: U.S. House of Representatives passes milestone voting and ethics legislation

U.S. House of Representatives passes milestone voting and ethics legislation

NDG 3/4: New Study: Innocent Blacks seven times more likely to be wrongfully convicted of murder than innocent whites

New Study: Innocent Blacks seven times more likely to be wrongfully convicted of murder than innocent whites