Kentucky’s lone HBCU is in flux.
Pupil organizers and alums met Monday (Mar. 30) to contemplate amendments to a not too long ago handed state senate invoice that will fully change the id of the state’s solely Traditionally Black Faculty and College, alter admission necessities and the college’s mission.
Final week, the state senate unanimously handed Senate Invoice 185, which might reclassify Kentucky State College as a land-grant polytechnic establishment. Different notable HBCUs which are land-grant establishments embody Alabama A&M and Tuskegee College, Florida A&M College, Alcorn State College, North Carolina A&T College, Langston College, South Carolina State College, Tennessee State College, Prairie View A&M College, and Virginia State College.
A polytechnic college facilities on technical, engineering and science schooling.
College students at Okay-State argued that the transfer to a polytechnic college can be a significant change for liberal arts majors. Others consider the transfer can be a type of whitewashing the college’s historical past, which dates again to 1886.
“I really feel like we’re white washing all the pieces and I really feel we’re going to do the identical factor with Kentucky State College,” Kristie Powe, a Kentucky State alum, advised WKYT.
The establishment confronted an intense dialogue of closure amongst lawmakers.
“We grew to become satisfied that now was not the time to shut Kentucky State, however quite to be a associate within the redefinition of this establishment and what it may possibly imply for the commonwealth,” state senator Chris McDaniel stated. If handed by the Common Meeting, Senate Invoice 185 would declare a “state of monetary exigency” for the subsequent 5 years, prompting college management to retain solely the school and employees required to help the enrollment of 1,000 college students.
Moreover, the invoice requires KSU to supply no more than 10 areas of educational research, excluding completely on-line applications. It additionally impacts Greek life on the college, requiring fraternities and sororities to reapply for constitution recognition. Whilst college students put together a protest in opposition to the invoice, campus management argues that the college would stay categorized as an HBCU with a deal with STEM.
“Our repositioning alongside these traces will likely be a part of a for much longer historical past of evolution at Kentucky State. Since our founding in 1886 and our designation as a 1890 land-grant establishment simply 4 years later, the College has continued to develop and alter in response to the wants of Kentucky,” Kentucky State President Dr. Koffi Akakpo wrote in a letter addressed to the KSU neighborhood. “…This second needs to be understood not as a break from who we’re, however as one other chapter in who we have gotten.”


















