Showing posts with label Spelman College. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spelman College. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Spelman left spellbound by Michelle Obama

College Park, GA - First Lady Michelle Obama spoke about community service, helping others and overcoming obstacles when she addressed 550 Spelman College graduates Sunday in College Park. "Do big things," she told her audience. "Now it's your turn to repay the favor."

Obama delivered her keynote speech to 9,000 people in the ballroom of the Georgia International Convention Center, saluting the graduating class for one of the nation’s two historically black women’s colleges.

HD Digital Video: First Lady Michelle Obama Commencement Address At Spellman College- CLICK HERE for CBS Atlanta, high quality viewing.


Read remarks from First Lady Michelle Obama's Commencement address at Spelman College here.

“It is vitally important that you all rise to the highest ranks of every industry and every profession,” Obama said. “As you climb those career ladders, just remember to reach down and pull others up behind you.”

Obama recounted how she took a high-paying job in the high-rise offices of a Chicago law firm. While she welcomed the paycheck, and paying down her student loans, she missed doing more fulfilling work.


Videographer: Mskekemichel; Spelman College -- 2011 Commencement Address by First Lady Michelle Obama.

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Sunday, April 24, 2011

First Lady Michelle Obama to deliver Commencement Address to the Spelman College Class of 2011

First Lady Michelle Obama
ATLANTA, GA - A dedicated proponent of service and working with young people, first lady Michelle Obama is an example of how one woman can positively influence the world. On Sunday, May 15, at 3 p.m., at the Georgia International Convention Center, Mrs. Obama will inspire more than 500 graduates to also leave their mark on the world when she delivers the commencement address to the Spelman College class of 2011. Mrs. Obama will also receive an honorary degree.

Honorary degrees will also be bestowed upon director, actress and choreographer Debbie Allen, and her sister, actress and director Phylicia Rashad. Wendy Kopp, CEO and founder of Teach For America will receive the National Community Service Award.

"Having Mrs. Obama as our 2011 Commencement speaker is a true honor because she embodies the Spelman College mission which is to prepare women to change the world in a meaningful way," said Beverly Daniel Tatum, Ph.D., president, Spelman College. "I know our students will be inspired by her powerful presence."

As first lady, Mrs. Obama uses her platform to support military families, help working women balance career and family, encourage national service, promote the arts and arts education, and foster healthy eating and healthy living for children and families across the country. In 2010, she launched the Let's Move! Campaign, a nationwide effort to solve the epidemic of childhood obesity within a generation.

Underscoring the important contributions made by all the honorees, Dr. Tatum said "Our honorees have made a significant impact on the world just as Spelman women do. They offer our graduates empowered examples of excellence in action with game-changing results. We could not be happier!"



Honorary Degree Recipient: Debbie Allen, director, choreographer and author
Debbie Allen continues to be one of the most respected, relevant, and versatile talents in the entertainment industry today. She is an internationally recognized director, choreographer and author. Allen has received three Emmy awards honoring her choreography, and two Emmys and one Golden Globe for her role as "Lydia Grant" in the hit series "Fame." Allen has choreographed for artists such as Michael Jackson, Mariah Carey, and Janet Jackson, and also holds the distinction of having choreographed the Academy Awards a total of ten times, six in consecutive years. She has accumulated a long list of directing and producing credits for television, including "The Fresh Prince of Bel Air," "The Parkers," "That's So Raven," "All of Us," "Girlfriends," "Everybody Hates Chris," "Hellcats" and "Grey's Anatomy." She also produced the Steven Spielberg epic film "Amistad" in 1997.

Honorary Degree Recipient: Phylicia Rashad, actress, director
Phylicia Rashad is an actress, director and singer, best known for her role as Claire Huxtable on the NBC sitcom "The Cosby Show." She is the first African-American actress to win the Tony Award for Best Performance by a Leading Actress in a Play, for her role in the revival of "A Raisin in the Sun." Rashad recently made her directorial debut at the helm of Seattle Rep's production of August Wilson's "Gem of the Ocean." Her other Broadway credits include "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof," "Dreamgirls," "The Wiz" and "Ain't Supposed to Die a Natural Death." Rashad has received many awards, including an NAACP Image Award for Best Actress in a Comedy Series for her roles on "The Cosby Show" and the CBS sitcom "Cosby," on which she played Ruth Lucas. She has also been nominated for two Emmy Awards and has received two People's Choice Awards.

National Community Service Award Recipient: Wendy Kopp, CEO and founder, Teach For America
Wendy Kopp is CEO and founder of Teach For America, an organization established to eliminate educational inequity by enlisting the nation's most promising future leaders in the effort. Today more than 8,000 Teach For America corps members are in the midst of two-year teaching commitments in 39 regions across the country, reaching over 500,000 students. Last year, more than 20 percent of Spelman seniors sought Teach for America posts.

Kopp is the author of "A Chance to Make History: What Works and What Doesn't in Providing an Excellent Education for All" (2011) and "One Day, All Children: The Unlikely Triumph of Teach For America and What I Learned Along the Way" (2000).

Baccalaureate Service:
Spelman will hold its Baccalaureate ceremony on Saturday, May 14, 2011 on the Spelman College Oval beginning at 9 a.m. This year's speaker will be Emilie M. Townes, Ph.D., Andrew W. Mellon Professor of African-American Religion and Theology at the Yale Divinity School.



Spelman College:
Founded in 1881, Spelman College is a prestigious, highly selective, liberal arts college that prepares women to change the world. Located in Atlanta, Ga., this historically black college boasts an 83 percent graduation rate, and outstanding alumnae such as Children's Defense Fund Founder Marian Wright Edelman; former U.S. Foreign Service Director General Ruth Davis, authors Tina McElroy Ansa and Pearl Cleage; and actress LaTanya Richardson. More than 83 percent of the full-time faculty members have Ph.D.s or other terminal degrees, and the average faculty to student ratio is 12:1. More than 2,100 students attend Spelman.

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Spelman College Founder's Day Convocation


Videographer: yojartistry; 2009 Performance for Spelman's Annual Founder's Day Convocation.

Videographer: SpelmanCollege; Activist, philosopher, scholar, and sociopolitical critic Cornel West, Ph. D., was keynote speaker for Spelman College's 2009 commencement. Considered a drum major for justice and a tireless, fearless change agent in America's discourse on race, justice and democracy, Dr. West charged the Class of 2009 to challenge the status quo and fulfill their commitment to charge the world.

Videographer: HBCU247; Spelman College

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VISIT: SPELMANJAGUARS

Thursday, March 20, 2008

Spelman, Black Schools Hit by Budget Ax as Bush Erases Aid Gain

(Bloomberg)--When it comes to America's more than 100 historically black colleges, the Bush administration is giving with one hand and taking back with the other.

President George W. Bush signed a law in September adding $85 million to the annual support of $238.1 million for Spelman College, Grambling State University in Louisiana and the other schools, saying it would help low-income Americans earn degrees and prepare them to compete for U.S. jobs. The Bush administration's new budget cuts aid to the schools by the same amount, angering Democrats who helped provide the money.

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Friday, September 28, 2007

U.S.News & World Report ranks black colleges for the first time






















Photo: Sisters Chapel at Spelman College



BY TIMES SPECIAL REPORT

Washington, D.C. – Spelman College, Howard University and Hampton University top the list of U.S.News & World Report’s first annual ranking of the nation’s historically black colleges and universities, the magazine announced this week.

Morehouse College, Spelman’s counterpart for male students in Atlanta, ranked fourth.
Florida A&M University in Tallahassee came in at No. 13.

The “America’s Best Black Colleges” rankings were released on Thursday at www.usnews.com/blackcolleges, and will be available on newsstands beginning Monday, Oct. 1, in the magazine issue dated Oct. 8.

The 2008 edition of “America’s Best Black Colleges” marks the first time U.S.News & World Report has released a stand-alone ranking of historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs), as defined by the U.S. Department of Education.

These schools have been – and will continue to be – ranked within their appropriate categories in U.S. News’s annual “Best Colleges” issue, published annually in August, the magazine stated.

The “Best Black Colleges” issue is the latest extension of U.S.News & World Report’s expanding “Best” series which includes “America’s Best Colleges,” “America’s Best Graduate Schools,” “America’s Best Hospitals,” “America’s Best Children’s Hospitals,” “America’s Best Health Plans,” and “America’s Best Leaders.”

Additional “Best” issues are scheduled to launch later this fall.

“As historically black colleges and universities continue to play a vital role in today’s higher education landscape, we decided to create a specific ranking of them to allow apples-to-apples comparisons of these schools,” said Brian Kelly, editor of U.S.News & World Report. “This unique ranking offers for the first time an independent perspective on these institutions to help students and parents make an informed choice about one of life’s most important and expensive decisions.”

Included in this listing are any HBCUs as defined by the U.S. Department of Education that were also eligible for inclusion in U.S.News & World Report’s 2008 edition of “America’s Best Colleges.”

The ranking table lists numerically the schools in the top half of the 70 eligible to be ranked – 37 schools are listed, as four tied for 34th place. Those falling into the second half are listed alphabetically.

The “America’s Best Black Colleges” methodology closely resembles that of U.S.News & World Report’s annual “America’s Best Colleges” rankings.

The schools are ranked using key industry standards for measuring higher education quality: peer assessment, graduation and retention rates, faculty resources, student selectivity, financial resources and alumni giving rates.

Earlier this year, U.S. News conducted its first-ever peer survey among only the HBCUs, asking head administrators to rate the scholarship and quality of all other black colleges with which they were familiar.

This method enables consumers to make an educated choice based on an unbiased, side-by-side comparison of institutions, the magazine stated.

Critics say the U.S. News college rankings warp college admissions and distract colleges from educating students.

But Kelly, the magazine’s editor, says students and their parents come to the magazine to make sense of all the data that is available on colleges.

A complete detailing of the methodology used for the HBCU survey can be found online at www.usnews.com/blackcolleges.
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2008 “America’s Best Black Colleges” Rankings

1. Spelman College • Atlanta, GA
2. Howard University • Washington, DC
3. Hampton University • Hampton, VA
4. Morehouse College • Atlanta, GA
5. Fisk University • Nashville, TN
6. Tuskegee University • Tuskegee, AL
7. Claflin University • Orangeburg, SC
8. Xavier University of Louisiana • New Orleans, LA
9. Dillard University • New Orleans, LA
10. Johnson C. Smith University • Charlotte, NC
11. Tennessee State University • Nashville, TN
12. Winston-Salem State University • Winston-Salem, NC
13. Florida A&M University • Tallahassee, FL
14. Morgan State University • Baltimore, MD
15. Virginia State University • Petersburg, VA
16. Bennett College • Greensboro, NC
16. Elizabeth City State University • Elizabeth City, NC
16. North Carolina Central University • Durham, NC
19. North Carolina A&T State University • Greensboro, NC
20. Tougaloo College • Tougaloo, MS
21. Alcorn State University • Alcorn State, MS
22. Clark Atlanta University • Atlanta, GA
22. Oakwood College • Huntsville, AL
22. South Carolina State University • Orangeburg, SC
22. University of Maryland Eastern Shore • Princess Anne, MD
26. Alabama Agricultural & Mechanical University • Normal, AL
26. Albany State University • Albany, GA
26. Delaware State University • Dover, DE
26. Jackson State University • Jackson, MS
26. Kentucky State University • Frankfort, KY
26. Stillman College • Tuscaloosa, AL
32. Lincoln University • Lincoln University, PA
32. Mississippi Valley State University • Itta Bena, MS
34. Bluefield State College • Bluefield, WV
34. Fayetteville State University • Fayetteville, NC
34. Miles College • Birmingham, AL
34. Norfolk State University • Norfolk, VA

Source: U.S.News & World Report
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Comments from the folks at the Daytona Beach News Journal regarding FAMU....
No comments are necessary from the FAMU side as U.S. News could not find two graduate level programs at BCC to justify a "U."

B-CU misses top ranking but still measures up

By MARK HARPER, Education Writer

DAYTONA BEACH -- For the first time, U.S.News & World Report has ranked historically black colleges and universities, and Bethune-Cookman University is relegated to the second tier.

Out of 70 schools rated by the magazine, B-CU failed to make the top 37 in the upper group. Alumni giving and its acceptance of students with lower college entrance exam scores were factors that lowered the school's ranking, while other categories were in line with the top tier.

Students, alumni and friends gathering in Daytona Beach for this weekend's homecoming will be "shocked," one school official predicted.

"It is surprising," said Willis Walter, vice president for institutional research, planning and accreditation. "In most of the categories, we rank very high -- if not at the top."

Bethune-Cookman's percentage of returning freshmen (73) is better than the average of the top tier. Its student-faculty ratio (17-1) and other measures also compared favorably.

Even the university's relatively low percentage of alumni donors (7 percent) doesn't appear to be that much lower than the majority of the top-tier schools.

Bethune-Cookman officials say the school has increased its alumni giving rate by 63 percent since 2005-06, the time frame upon which the rankings are based.

Another factor that hurt the university's rating was student selectivity, which accounts for 15 percent of the rating.

The university's mission, though, is to provide access to higher education for students who are not necessarily academic all-stars in high school, but who have shown the potential to become leaders, Walter said.

"If we had excluded more students, we would get more (rating) points," he said.

One of Bethune-Cookman's fiercest rivals, Florida A&M University in Tallahassee, was rated 13th despite revelations of financial and accreditation problems in recent years.

"It kind of makes U.S.News look silly," Bethune-Cookman spokeswoman Catherine Kershaw said.

A U.S.News & World Report editor did not return a call for this report.

Brian Kelly, editor of U.S.News & World Report, said in a news release: "This unique ranking offers for the first time an independent perspective on these institutions to help students and parents make an informed choice about one of life's most important and expensive decisions."

The magazine's ratings will be posted today at: www.usnews.com/blackcolleges.