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UNCF — A Mind is a Terrible Thing to Waste®

Join us in our fight for better futures.

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    • Member HBCUs
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UNCF — A Mind is a Terrible Thing to Waste®
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  • Introduction
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  • Annual Report 2025
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Introduction

  • Directors’ Letter

Impact

  • HBCU Economic Impact Report Reveals Universities’ Unmatched Contributions, Urgent Funding Needs
  • Groundbreaking UNCF Study Highlights Importance of Black Teachers
  • New Research from UNCF, Healthy Minds Network Shows Strong Mental Health Outcomes Among HBCU Students
  • UNCF Report Highlights HBCUs’ Role in Strengthening the Black Teacher Pipeline
  • Biden Administration Announces Big Investment Totals for HBCUs

Innovate

  • UNCF Launches Historic PSA Campaign
  • Project ACCLAIM Launches to Strengthen HBCU Students’ Pathways into Financial Services
  • Robert Kraft Donates $1 Million to Support New UNCF Initiative Combating Hate and Bigotry
  • Innovations at HBCUs: Spotlighting Groundbreaking Research and Achievements

Inspire

  • Children’s Book Author and STEM Nonprofit Founder Supported by UNCF Scholarship 
  • UNCF Student Leadership Conference: Donor Support Enables Students to Lead and Succeed
  • A Banner Year for Livingstone College: New Grants and Equipment Improving UNCF-Member Institution
  • Rising from the Ashes: UNCF’s Lifeline Amidst the LA Wildfires
  • Better Futures for Target Scholars: How the Program Changes Student Lives

Invest

  • $600M from Bloomberg Philanthropies Supports Four Historically Black Medical Schools to Train Next Generation of Doctors 
  • UNCF Raises $2 Million Through Walk for Education in 19 Cities to Support HBCUs and Students
  • UNCF-Style March Madness Raises $13.6M for HBCUs and their Students
  • Miles College Awarded Home Depot Innovation Lounge Grant
  • Tennis Champion Coco Gauff Gifts UNCF $100,000 to Create Scholarship for HBCU Students Playing Competitive Tennis
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IMPACT

UNCF Report Highlights HBCUs’ Role in Strengthening the Black Teacher Pipeline

This UNCF report provides a snapshot of best practices from four HBCUs to strengthen the Black teacher pipeline. The research underscores the significant impact Black teachers have on Black students including serving as role models, enhancing educational experiences, boosting graduation and college enrollment rates and improving reading and mathematics proficiency and end-of-year performance.

This UNCF report provides a snapshot of best practices from four HBCUs to strengthen the Black teacher pipeline. The research underscores the significant impact Black teachers have on Black students, including serving as role models, enhancing educational experiences, boosting graduation and college enrollment rates and improving reading and mathematics proficiency and end-of-year performance.

In fiscal year 2025, UNCF released a special report highlighting historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUs) as key producers of teachers for America’s public education system.

The report, The Heart Work of Hard Work: Black Teacher Pipeline Best Practices at HBCU Teacher Education Programs, features a snapshot of recruitment, culturally responsive teaching, curricular and co-curricular strategies that strengthen the Black teacher pipeline from four HBCUs: UNCF-member Huston-Tillotson University, Alabama A&M University, Albany State University and Fayetteville State University. The report, made possible by a donation from the Voya Financial Foundation, was authored by Dr. Nadrea Njoku, former assistant vice president, Frederick D. Patterson Research Institute (FDPRI), UNCF; Dr. Keeley Copridge, senior research associate, FDPRI, UNCF; Dr. LaTasha Mosley, graduate research fellow, FDPRI, UNCF; Dr. Raeshan Davis, a former research fellow, FDPRI, UNCF; and Dr. Brittny James, consultant, Insight Consulting and Associates. The four HBCUs highlighted in the report rank among the top 25 four-year HBCUs producing Black teacher graduates across various K-12 fields.

The research underscores the significant impact Black teachers have on Black students including serving as role models, enhancing educational experiences, boosting graduation and college enrollment rates and improving reading and mathematics proficiency and end-of-year performance.

Findings from the report were shared Feb. 13, 2024, as part of the “Equity in Education: Advancing Opportunities for Black Teachers and Parents” virtual learning series conducted by FDPRI. More information is available at UNCF.org/EquityinEd.

While HBCUs represent only 3% of colleges and universities nationwide, they produce 11% of all Black graduates and 50% of all Black educators, according to data from the FDPRI and the National Association for Equal Opportunity in Higher Education.

“Black teachers are essential to Black students’ educational, social and emotional development,” said Copridge, one of the report’s authors. “Yet Black teachers represent only 7% of America’s teaching workforce. To diversify the nation’s P-12 system, it is critical to strengthen the Black teacher pipeline and HBCUs are central to that effort.”

The report identifies historical and systemic barriers contributing to the scarcity of Black teachers, including desegregation, racism and standardized testing policies that resulted in nearly 100,000 minority teachers in 35 states losing their licenses from the late 1970s through the early 1990s.

“Black teachers are intimately aware of these barriers, but they continue to maintain high expectations for their students’ success,” said Njoku, another report author. “Research shows Black teachers have a deep understanding of Black students’ lives in and outside the classroom.”

Historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUs) are instrumental in the proliferation of Black graduates. HBCUs make up only three percent of colleges and universities, yet produce 50% of Black teachers (UNCF, National Association for Equal Opportunity in Higher Education, 2008).

The report calls for continued research on culturally responsive curriculum, examination of teacher certification exams, increased federal and state funding, partnerships with private organizations, expanded resources for HBCU faculty and the promotion of nontraditional pathways into teaching.

By issuing this report, UNCF demonstrates how strategic investment in HBCUs strengthens the nation’s public education system and ensures a new generation of Black educators is prepared to lead. Donor support enables HBCUs to implement innovative practices, overcome systemic barriers and cultivate teachers who inspire, mentor and transform the lives of students across the country. Through these efforts, UNCF and its partners are creating better futures for all Americans—because when HBCUs thrive, the nation’s classrooms thrive.

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