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About Hbcu Law Schools in South Carolina
Former president Henry Tisdale served as president of Claflin University for 25 years. During that time enrollment at HBCU’s nationwide has declined. Claflin has declined less through innovation in recruiting, retention and class offerings. BY TIFFANIE MORTON
MORE FROM THE SERIES
South Carolinaโs historically black colleges and universities
Read more of The Stateโs series on HBCUs in South Carolina and what the future holds for some of the stateโs most essential schools.
EXPAND ALL
If it wasnโt for Claflin University, William Fairfax wouldnโt have gone to college.
He wouldnโt have been majoring in political science at one of the stateโs top schools and he wouldnโt have run for class president or Orangeburg City Council.
Fairfax, who hails from the Washington, D.C., area, wasnโt planning to go to college. But after coming to Orangeburg for a summer program at Claflin, Fairfax was sold.
โI always heard the term unapologetically black, but I didnโt understand what it meant until I got to Claflin,โ Fairfax said. โI wouldnโt trade it for the world.โ
Claflin is one of South Carolinaโs eight historically black colleges and universities, or HBCUs. For some young black students, the schools offer the only option for attending a four-year school. For other students, the schools not only deliver a good education, but provide a comfortable environment to discover themselves.
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HBCUs are also gateways to the black community. They helped create the American black middle class.
But theyโre threatened.
Throughout the state, fewer African American students like Fairfax are choosing to attend the stateโs historically black colleges and universities, enrollment trends show.
Between 2008 and 2018, enrollment at the seven HBCUs tracked by SC decreased 33 percent, while enrollment in all colleges statewide increased 3 percent in the same period, according to data from the S.C. Commission on Higher Education. (The state does not track enrollment at Clinton College in Rock Hill.)
The sharpest drop in enrollment came at Denmark Technical College, where the number of students fell 83 percent from 2008 to 2018. That has prompted calls from the legislature to downsize the school or consolidate it with Orangeburg-Calhoun Technical College.
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The overall drop in South Carolina follows a nationwide trend. At the countryโs 102 HBCUs, enrollment decreased 9 percent between 2010 and 2017, according to data from the National Center on Education Statistics.
The drop in enrollment is particularly distressing because historically black colleges and universities, often abbreviated HBCUs, rely more on enrollment โ and therefore tuition โ than other colleges, said Bobby Donaldson, a University of South Carolina associate professor and civil rights historian.
Thatโs because HBCUs have smaller endowments than other schools, and private gifts, grants, and contracts make up a smaller percentage of HBCUsโ budgets, according to the American Council on Education.
โAll these schools, in their heyday, were the places to go,โ Donaldson said. โAnd now theyโre struggling to see where they will be decades from now.
BEHIND OUR REPORTING
What is an HBCU?
HBCU stands for historically black college or university. Federal law defines an HBCU as โany historically black college or university that was established prior to 1964, whose principal mission was, and is, the education of black Americans, and that is accredited by a nationally recognized accrediting agency.โ
South Carolina has eight HBCUs. The two public HBCUs are S.C. State University in Orangeburg and Denmark Technical College in Bamberg County.
The six private HBCUs are Allen University in Columbia, Benedict College in Columbia, Claflin University in Orangeburg, Morris College in Sumter, Clinton College in Rock Hill, and Voorhees College in Denmark.
The S.C. Commission on Higher Education does not track enrollment for Clinton College.
HBCUS ARE THREATENED
Of the seven HBCUs for which S.C. keeps enrollment data, all but one, Claflin University, lost enrollment between 2008 and 2018.
There are several reasons for this, experts say. However, itโs clear the enrollment drop is not caused by a lack of potential African American students. The number of black students enrolled at S.C. high schools was about the same in 2018 as it was in 2008, and graduation rates among black students increased from 74 percent in 2008 to 77 percent in 2018-2019, according to S.C. Department of Education data.
An example of this is the Richland 1 school district in the Columbia area, where 73 percent of the students are black, according to the districtโs website. The district reached its highest ever graduation rate in 2019, of 82.2, according to a previous article from The State.
But large state schools, such as the University of South Carolina and Clemson, aggressively pursue a more diverse student body, which is drawing away some of the higher performing African American students who would have traditionally attended an HBCU, Donaldson said.
Donaldson referred to this as a โbrain drain.โ
For example, USCโs incoming freshman class is among the largest and most diverse in recent memory, according to a recent article from The State.
โI think whatโs happened is African American students have more options than they did 45 years ago,โ said Brian Bridges, the United Negro College Fundโs chief research officer.
Still, a higher percentage of African American students attend an HBCU in S.C. than nationwide.
In S.C. one in six African American college students attends an HBCU, according to Commission on Higher Education Data. Nationwide, thatโs 1 in 11, according to 2015 data from a Pew Research survey.
Working against many HBCUs is a perception in some minds theyโre subpar colleges for students who canโt get in elsewhere.
โWhen I was in high school, teachers were boosting (predominantly white institutions) to me โ Winthrop, Wofford, things like that,โ said Bryant Cain, a psychology major at Claflin who graduated at the top of his class from Eau Claire High School in Richland 1.
โIt should be known that HBCU students can be just as good and sometimes better thanโฆ other graduates,โ Cain said.
Historically black colleges and universities are trying to distance themselves from those stereotypes.
For example, Benedict College used to have a โsuccess equals effortโ policy where many freshmen could receive passing grades just by showing effort. That policy led to outrage from Benedict College professors and scorn from national experts.
A 2006 blog posted in the Chronicle of Higher Education singled out Benedictโs โsuccess equals effortโ policy, blasting it as โa shameful enabler of student underachievement,โ according to the article.
โI think the image was, we werenโt a first-choice institution. Nor were we a second or a third,โ said Emmanuel Lalande, Benedictโs vice president of enrollment.
Since Benedict President Roslyn Artis took over in the summer of 2017, the school has reversed course by adding admissions requirements and seeking out higher-achieving students, Lalande said. As a result, Benedict in 2019 welcomed its largest freshman class since 2012: 716 students, Lalande said.
Artis also cut tuition 26 percent while improving the schoolโs financial situation, and the school was named โHBCU of the yearโ by HBCU Digest, a national organization, according to previous articles from The State.
โWe have the opportunity to reintroduce Benedict to our South Carolina students,โ Lalande said. โWeโre looking to get the best and the brightest.โ
MOVING FORWARD
While major schools like USC become more diverse, HBCUs are becoming less black. In 2008, S.C.โs HBCUs had 13,318 African American students, 95 percent of the schoolsโ total population, according to S.C. Commission on Higher Education data. In 2018, the stateโs HBCUs had 8,817 African American students, comprising 91 percent of the schoolโs total population, data show.
Thatโs not an accident, and itโs not necessarily out of character for HBCUs, Bridges said.
โTheyโre historically black, not exclusively black,โ Bridges said.
For example, the first students at Howard University, a historically black college in Washington, D.C., were white women, Bridges said. The founder of Benedict College, Bathsheba Benedict, was a white woman, and the first three presidents of Claflin University were white men.
Benedict College, more so than any other HBCU in S.C., has been leaning on new demographics to support enrollment, data show.
The school, which recently hired a Hispanic recruiter, has seen Hispanic, white and international students make up an increasing percentage of its enrollment since 2008, according to Commission on Higher Education data. This yearโs class includes more international students than any other class in recent memory, Lalande said.
In 2008, 98 percent of Benedictโs student body was black. By 2018, that percent shrank to 87 percent, according to S.C. Commission on Higher Education Data.
Although Meeghan Kane, a history instructor at Benedict, is white, she said she teaches there because โAfrican American history is American history.โ
Being a white instructor, Kaneโs lessons often invite difficult, but necessary, conversations, she said.
โI try to be frank about the opportunities Iโve had because of the color of my skin,โ Kane said. โI just try to be really open and invite questions and hopefully we work things outโฆ no matter how much I know about black history Iโm not a part of the black experience.โ
Throughout the country, HBCUs are seeing an increase in enrollment from white students, according to an article from Diverse Issues in Higher Education. One example: West Virginia State University (where Benedict President Artis received her undergraduate degree) is an HBCU, but 63 percent of its students were white in 2017, according to an article by Diverse Issues in Higher Education.
SETTING AN EXAMPLE
HBCUs can also help set an example for other schools looking to increase diversity, said S.C. State University alum Brig. Gen. Milford H. Beagle Jr., the 51st commanding general of Fort Jackson in Columbia.
โWhen I go to campus on an HBCU anywhere here, there is more diversity than another other type of school,โ Beagle said.
Beagle is a believer in HBCUs. Both of his sons attended S.C. Stateโs Reserve Officer Training Corps program, which Beagle said has produced more general officers than anywhere except the U.S. Military Academy at West Point.
โFor that many general officers to come out of S.C. State is really phenomenal,โ Beagle said.
One of the benefits of HBCUs are the small size and close-knit community, which can be a make-or-break factor when choosing a college, students and alumni say.
โI donโt think, coming out of high school, I would have been comfortable with a larger class size,โ Beagle said.
Though HBCUs may be adopting the tactics of larger schools โ such as recruiting out-of-state or international students, opening graduate programs and having a football team โ HBCUs still have a role in serving underprivileged students of color, Lalande and other HBCU experts say.
On average, 87 percent of HBCU students are from impoverished backgrounds, according to Pell Grant statistics from the National Center for Education Statistics. Thatโs more than any other type of school, data show. At technical schools, 59 percent of students are from an impoverished background. And at four-year public schools, 38 percent of students come from impoverished backgrounds, statistics show.
โMany of these schools (HBCUs) are targeting and recruiting and admitting students who would otherwise not be accepted elsewhere,โ Donaldson said.
โWhereas some schools have a benchmark in terms of a certain GPA or a certain SAT, other schools are saying, we actually want to create โฆ an opportunity for students who may not have that superb of resources or credentials,โ Donaldson said. โI think thatโs right. I think there needs to be a space to (have) opportunities for all students who aspire for a higher education.โ
Although HBCUs take in primarily low-income students, and despite S.C.โs HBCUsโ higher net cost compared to other colleges, student loan default rates are only slightly higher than technical colleges, according to federal student aid data.
โHistorically black colleges and universities have been institutions of success in terms of being able to take students who were coming with such profiles and yet finding success in educating those students,โ said former Claflin President Henry Tisdale.
Tisdale served as the schoolโs president for 25 years, which is before many of Claflinโs current students were born. He retired in July 2019.
โSo I think HBCUs do a great job with the students who have traditionally attended these institutions in creating success,โ Tisdale said. โI think that is unique.โ
THE CHALLENGES FACING HBCUS ARE NOT NEW
In 2014, taxpayers footed the bill for $12 million in unpaid loans from South Carolina State University, all while the school faced threats to its accreditation, which allows it to receive federal funds and lends credence to its degrees, according to previous articles from The State.
Benedict Collegeโs financial situation was so dire in 2006 it had to borrow money to cover payroll, which left a scuff on the schoolโs credit rating. After that, the federal government audited Benedict and required the school to pay aid disbursements to students before seeking additional money, according to The Stateโs archives.
In 1994, Allen Universityโs accreditation was threatened because it owed $600,000 in debt. Seven years later the school graduated fewer than 40 students, The Stateโs archives show.
Experts on HBCUs stress theyโre not monolithic entities and vary widely between one another. Claflin University, for example, is by many accounts a model of excellence for historically black colleges and universities both in South Carolina and throughout the country.
Claflin has been ranked one of the countryโs top 10 HBCUs for 10 straight years, according to U.S. News & World Report. Graduates of the school had a lower student loan default rate in 2016, the most recent year available, than all other HBCUs except for Allen University, according to U.S. Department of Education data. Claflin ranks ninth nationwide for the percentage of alumni who donate to the school, according to a 2018 article from U.S. News & World Report.
HBCUS ARE A GATEWAY INTO THE BLACK COMMUNITY
There is a value to HBCUs that goes beyond dollars or formulas, students and alumni say.
HBCUs improve the quality of the neighborhoods around them by removing blight and boosting local economies, according to experts, alumni and newspaper archives. They also preserve the histories of their communities and theyโre a launch pad for social change.
For the latter, look no further than the 2020 Democratic presidential campaign, where candidates have sought to woo South Carolinaโs African American voters.
More 2020 Democratic presidential candidates, five, have visited Allen University, a school of 700 students, than Clemson University โ two visited there โ a school of 25,000, according to The Stateโs ongoing map tracking campaign stops.
Thatโs not just because of Allenโs convenient location at the center of Columbia. More candidates traveled to South Carolina State, in Orangeburg, than Winthrop, Wofford or Furman , according to The Stateโs database of candidate visits.
โFor the primaries, HBCUs are really important,โ said Kane, the Benedict College professor.
Regardless of whether politicians deliver on their promises, history shows HBCUs are a boon for the communities around them.
HBCUs have a $129 million economic impact on S.C., according to a 2019 report from the United Negro College Fund.
HBCUs directly employ 1,398 employees, according to the S.C. Department of Administration and S.C. Independent Colleges and Universities. However, the presence of HBCUs creates nearly 5,000 total jobs statewide, according to the UNCF study.
By comparison, West Columbia-based Nephron Pharmaceuticals employs more than 900 people; Sticky Fingers employs 1,100 and Samsungโs Newberry County facility employs less than 1,000, according to the companiesโ websites.
At Benedict and Allen, โnot only were they involved in civil rights, but they produced the black middle classesโฆ not only in Columbia, but those students left here and went all around the country,โ Donaldson said.
As HBCUs expanded, they also displaced blight within a neighborhood. That happened in the late โ90s when Benedict College spent $1 million and committed $24 million to buy land and improve buildings, according to The Stateโs archives.
Benedictโs ROTC program worked out of a once-abandoned neighborhood store while the Honors College operated out of an old residential house, according to the article.
While HBCUs are important politically and economically, they also have a personal value, students say.
HBCUs foster a family-like environment where black students are the majority, allowing them to learn who they are without feeling like a social interloper, say students, teachers and HBCU experts.
โItโs something about the spirit of the room โฆ that is totally different for me working with HBCUsโ said Gwenda Greene, who has taught at Benedict College for more than 24 years. โWe all do lean on each other.โ
Students say that makes them feel comfortable, but also helps them be better students.
โI was always the black girl in a situation,โ said Claflin University senior Nea Richards, a native of Cross Hill who attended Clinton High School โWhen I got to my HBCU I didnโt have to be the black girl. I could just be me.โ
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William Fairfax is a senior at Claflin University in Orangeburg. While at the school he became interested in politics and ran a close race for city council and is working an internship for the Joe Biden campaign. 10/16/19William Fairfax is a senior at Claflin University in Orangeburg. While at the school he became interested in politics and ran a close race for city council. He is also working an internship for the Joe Biden campaign. 10/16/19 TRACY GLANTZ TGLANTZ@THESTATE.COM
HBCU CHANGE is a company created by founder Xavier Peoples. It’s a company that uses small change to make a large impact. HBCU Change collects change from usersโ everyday credit or debit card purchases, rounding up to the nearest dollar. Each month, the app donates the change to the schools that users choose. It also keeps track of user donations for tax purposes, for philanthropy made easy.
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HOW DOES HBCU CHANGE WORK WITH ASBURY AUTOMOTIVE
monetization_on EASY DONATION OPPORTUNITY
Every time you come to one of our hundreds of Asbury Automotive service centers you have an opportunity to give. Whenever you do a transaction you will be given the option to round your total up to the next dollar amount and by doing so you will have donated to an HBCU! It couldn’t be any easier. If you’re feeling generous you can even choose $1,$3, or $5 donations to help reach HBCU CHANGE’s goal of 1 Billion dollars for Historically Black College and Universities.
insert_emoticon TRUTH AND TRANSPARENCY
Every donation gets collected toward HBCU Change’s goal of 1 Billion dollars over the next 5 years! Unlike other charities where you may not be sure where all of your donation is going, with HBCU Change you can rest assured that 100% of your donations is going to HBCUs. Your funds will ensure the growth and development of wonderful and prestigious Historically Black Colleges and Universities.
location_city YOUR DOLLARS AT WORK
There are 107 historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs) in the United States, including public and private institutions, community and four-year institutions, medical and law schools. Lack of funding has forced HBCUs to cut costs, eliminate programs and sell valuable resources. More than 50% of the nationโs African American public school teachers and 70% of African American dentists earned degrees at HBCUs. HBCUs have over a $10.2 billion positive impact on the nationโs economy.
OUR MISSION
To raise money to help reach HBCU Change’s goal of $1 billion over the next 5 years for HBCUs
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5 HBCU FUN FACTS
The first colleges for African Americans were established largely through the efforts of black churches with the support of the American Missionary Association and the Freedmenโs Bureau. The second Morrill Act of 1890 required statesโespecially former confederate statesโto provide land-grants for institutions for black students if admission was not allowed elsewhere. As a result, many Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) were founded.
Between 1861 and 1900 more than 90 institutions of higher learning were established. Shaw Universityโโfounded in Raleigh, North Carolina, in 1865โโwas the first black college organized after the Civil War. Other schools include: Talladega College, Howard University, Morehouse College and Hampton University.
Early HBCUs were established to train teachers, preachers and other community members. During the 20th century, many HBCUs shifted their focus to promote scholarship among African Americans. Academic councils, conferences and founded scholastic journals to showcase black intellectual thought. Such notable figures as W.E.B. Du Bois, Ida B. Wells, Booker T. Washington and Martin Luther King Jr. attended a historically black college or university.
HBCUs opened the door of educational opportunity for many African Americans who were once legally denied an education. Additionally, these schools, provided African American students with a nurturing environment to explore their collective identities and cultures.
Today, HBCUs uphold a history of scholarship pursued by African Americans in the face of adversity.
JOYE LAW FIRM IS OFFERING ONE STUDENT ATTENDING A HISTORICALLY BLACK COLLEGE OR UNIVERSITY THE OPPORTUNITY TO WIN A COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIP TO HELP FURTHER THEIR EDUCATION.
CONGRATULATIONS TO OUR 2021 SCHOLARSHIP RECIPIENTS! THE NEXT PROGRAM WILL OPEN IN 2022 TBA.
Our firm will offer one $2,000 scholarship to a student in South Carolina who plans to attend or is attending a Historically Black College or University. The selection of the winning recipient is based on their essay entry, school activities, positions of leadership, special honors and awards, community involvement, academic performance, and professional pursuits.
Attention High School Seniors: If you are a South Carolina senior, you may eligible to apply for our second scholarship program in addition to this HBCU scholarship. Our firm is also offering six $2,000 scholarships to graduating seniors in South Carolina who plan to attend any four-year institution of higher learning. Learn more about this scholarship here.
HOW TO APPLY
APPLICANTS ARE REQUIRED TO SUBMIT THE FOLLOWING MATERIALS ALONG WITH THEIR 2021 ONLINE APPLICATION FORM BELOW
A current high school or college transcript;
A (bullet-point) list of any extracurricular activities or community involvement;
A 600-word (max.) essay on your choice of one of the two topics listed below:
What does attending an HBCU mean to you? Did you apply to other colleges?
How do you plan to use your education to benefit the community? Considering that this scholarship is a community initiative, how will your success benefit others?
A current photo (suitable for publication)
APPLY NOW
Please limit written entries to 600 words.
Thank you for your interest in our Scholarship program. Follow us on Facebook for updates.
HOW TO WIN
Our selection committee will review your packet with a particular focus on your essay.
2021 APPLICATION:
Application opens: February 1st
Deadline for applications: April 1st
We intend to โpublishโ the winning entry and disseminate them to leaders throughout South Carolina. The scholarship recipient will be notified at your respective schoolโs year-end awards ceremony. If your school does not have such a ceremony, we will notify the scholarship winners no later than April 15th
If you have any questions please feel free to contact:
Nicole Cerullo
5861 Rivers Avenue, Suite 101
North Charleston, SC 29406
Phone: 843.725.4252
Email: ncerullo@joyelawfirm.com
Web: www.joyelawfirm.com
We look forward to reviewing your application and wish you success in all your future endeavors.
SUBMIT YOUR APPLICATION HERE
The 2021 Scholarship application is now closed, thanks to all the people who submitted their applications, please check back for details on the winners later this month.
Below you can find a list of the top law schools in South Carolina we have gathered in a single portal. Alternatively, you can quickly find law programs based on your unique criteria by using oursearchmodules. With either path, you will have the opportunity to understand your law school options from accredited colleges and universities across the state of South Carolina. Access to our voluminous digital library puts you in the drivers seat to quickly collect admissions information from the best law school in South Carolina for you. If you are struggling on where to start your research, consider visiting ourlaw degreeportal and read the following eBooks we have published for students just like you:Crush the OddsandHow to Reduce the Cost of College. Our free tools and resources will help you effectively get your arms around the process and prepare yourself for success.
It is worth noting that the law schools you will find in South Carolina are perpetually competitive programs to get into. The bulk of students will need a high GPA and LSAT score plus hold a bachelors degree in a relevant field likecounterterrorism,economics,criminology, orpublic policyto be considered by top law programs. Students admitted to law schools can anticipate three years of intense study that will culminate with a JD or Juris Doctor. Emerging programs like a joint MBA and JD can be earned from many schools that may take longer to complete than a traditional law degree. Your overarching goal will be to find the best law degree in South Carolina for you. Doing so will help prepare you for a legal career and successfully pass theSC barexamination upon completion of the academic program.
Detailed List of Law Schools in South Carolina (2 Schools)
Only law schools accredited by the American Bar Association – Section of Legal Education and Admissions to the Bar are listed below. Other law schools may also exist in South Carolina, however they are may not listed here.
Schools are sorted by size with the largest school first, based on the number of law students graduating each year.
University of South Carolina – Columbia in Bluffton, SC
Visit the website for University of South Carolina – Columbia at http://www.sc.edu/
Program Details
Law program accredited since 1925
About 200 students graduate per year
Estimated tuition & fees are about $22,000 per year (Nonresidents: $54,000)
in Orangeburg, SC
Visit the website for at http://www.alu.edu/
Program Details
About 20 students graduate per year
Estimated tuition & fees are about $10,000 per year
Average attorney salaries in South Carolina range between $46,000 to $150,000. The variety of employment options available to lawyers can result in a very broad pay range, however here is a list of average salaries from areas across South Carolina.
Myrtle Beach, Conway, North Myrtle Beach: $123,000
Hilton Head Island, Bluffton, Beaufort: $96,000
Spartanburg: $126,000
Florence: $94,000
Lawyer’s in South carolina Compared to Median Income Averages
+43% Above State Median Income
+19% Above National Median Income
Lawyer’s in South carolina take home an average 23.00 per hour. Annual earnings for Lawyer’s working in the State of South carolina average $48,305 which is 43% above the state median income and 19% above the national median income for all occupations. Employment for a Lawyer makes up just of the working population in South carolina and is limited due to the specific qualifications required along with the schooling involved in this career path. The increasing demand for qualified Lawyers coupled with the educational barrier to enter the field is met with a steady supply of eager college graduates anxious to make a long-lasting impact in the lives of others in and around South carolina.
Average Income for a Lawyer in South carolina
Employment Median Hourly Wage Median Annual Wage
South carolina Lawyer 196,280 $23.00 $48,305
State Average 2,002,780.00 $16.11 $33,520.00
National Average 155,760,000.00 $19.33 $35,977.00Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics MEDIAN: $23.00 Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics, NCES, O*NET Online
Notes: Tuition & fee amounts are for both South Carolina in-state residents and out of state students, unless noted otherwise. The tuition information displayed is an estimate, which we calculated based on historical data and should be solely used for informational purposes only. Please contact the respective lawyer school for information about the current school year.
Source: IPEDS Survey 2012-2020: Data obtained from the US Dept. of Education’s Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS). Data may vary depending on school and academic year.
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