Home / Full timeline / The New York Times reports an assessment of Black studies in predominantly white colleges and universities. The findings receive mixed reviews.
The New York Times reports an assessment of Black studies in predominantly white colleges and universities. The findings receive mixed reviews.
1974 (Apr 20)
The New York Times reported a sixth anniversary assessment of Black studies in predominantly white colleges and universities. Since the student protests in the 1960s, which helped to give impetus to Black Studies as a legitimate academic enterprise, 1,272 institutions of higher learning had offered at least one course in the area. Although the tumult that surrounded the initiation of Black Studies movement had ceased, the controversy over the validity, viability, and aims of the programs continued. One of the more vocal critics of the programs was Professor Martin Kilson, a Black political scientist at Harvard University who called them "distinctly anti-intellectual and anti-achievement in orientation." Others saw them differently. Professor Barbara A. Wheeler of the City University of New York supported Black Studies as different from traditional studies in that they are organized around the Black experience rather than around the subject matter, allowing the Black student to see the impact of the event on his own life. Professors Elias Blake, Head of the Institute for Services to Education; Henry Cobb, Dean of Southern University at Baton Rouge; and Tobe Johnson, Director of undergraduate African American studies programs for the Atlanta University Center, completed an analysis of twenty-nine Black Studies programs for the U.S. Office of Education just prior to the Times report. Blake told the Times that the ideological questions had been settled, saying, "God knows we need more study on Black Americans. The issue is how do you build a good program." The Blake-Cobb-Johnson team found that only carefully structured programs were likely to survive in an era when colleges were undergoing financial retrenchment.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.