Enhancing
Black College Leadership
A joint effort of CIC and The College Fund/UNCF, this program provided
service to historically black institutions in three distinct ways:
Leadership Services. Enabled wider participation by Historically
Black College and University (HBCU) leaders in CIC institutes and workshops
(Presidents and Deans Institutes, Information Technologies and Regional
Faculty Workshops).
Interinstitutional Exchange. This article,* "Improving
Education Through Interinstitutional Exchanges," from the September/October
1999 issue of CIC's newsletter, summarizes CIC's experiences with interinstitutional
exchanges.*(This is a PDF Document. In order to
read it, you must have the Adobe Acrobat Reader, available for free download
from the Adobe Web site.)
Participating Institutions
Participating institutions included most of the members of The College
Fund/UNCF and scores of other private liberal arts colleges and universities.
Project Activities
Since 1988, CIC worked with The College Fund/UNCF to support the leadership
and faculty of historically black private colleges and universities (HBCUs).
The program assisted presidents, deans, other administrators and faculty
from private HBCUs to share and glean ideas with colleagues at national
conferences.
Beyond professional development, the project worked to create productive
links between private HBCUs and other private liberal arts institutions.
Toward this end, CIC supported more than 25 interinstitutional exchanges
of administrators and faculty as a key means to connect these colleges.
Although modest in number, these collaborations had dramatic results.
Colleges reformed their curricula based on what they learned from participating
in an exchange. Faculty have counseled each other on teaching effectiveness.
One pair of colleges co-developed a new course that was taught on each
campus. Administrators shared ideas for tackling problems. Rural students
had eye-opening experiences in the inner city; urban students had the
chance to practice teaching in a rural school system.
Program Outcomes
For a summary of what we learned in this project, see the CIC report
Coming Together,
available from CIC's publications
department.
Download a related publication:
In December 1996, CIC published a handbook, Building
Bridges: Meeting Interinstitutional Needs by Collaboration Through Interinstitutional
Exchanges, written by Ida Rousseau Mukenge, on lessons learned
from the initial 21 exchanges.
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