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☐ ☆ ✇ The Journal of Blacks in Higher Edu...

Pamela Haney Is the New President of Moraine Valley Community College in Illinois

By: Editor — July 3rd 2023 at 14:46

Pamela J. Haney is the president of Moraine Valley Community College in Palos Hills, Illinois. She took office on July 1.

Moraine Valley Community College enrolls more than 10,500 students, according to the most recent data reported by the U.S. Department of Education. African Americans make up 10 percent of the student body.

“It is an honor and privilege to be named as Moraine Valley’s president,” Dr. Haney said. “I’m following in the footsteps of a highly respected and committed leader from whom I’ve learned so much. As I begin my presidency, I promise to build on the college’s excellent foundation while advancing student success, innovation, community engagement, and mission-driven priorities.”

Since 2012, Dr. Haney has been serving as vice president for academic affairs at the college. Prior to coming to Moraine Valley in 2009, Dr. Haney served as program administrator and assistant professor of communication arts at Defiance College in Ohio. She also taught as an assistant professor of speech communication at Norfolk State University in Virginia.

Dr. Haney holds a bachelor’s degree in mass communication and a master’s degree in speech communication, both from Norfolk State University. She earned a doctorate in interpersonal communication from Bowling Green State University in Ohio.

☐ ☆ ✇ The Journal of Blacks in Higher Edu...

Legislation Would Allow Virginia’s Public HBCUs to Offer In-State Tuition to Non-Virginians

By: Editor — March 10th 2023 at 18:35

The Virginia General Assembly has passed legislation that will allow Norfolk State University and Virginia State University – the Commonwealth’s two state-operated HBCUs – to offer in-state tuition rates to any out-of-state student who has completed 30 credit hours of college coursework in data science and technology, science and engineering, health care, or education. If an out-of-state student being charged a reduced tuition rate were to switch to another program not leading to a job in a high-demand field, they would be charged tuition at the full rate for non-Virginia students.

Sponsors of the legislation presented evidence that students who graduate with a bachelor’s degree in these programs are likely to stay in Virginia after completing college. Thus, the new program aims to produce graduates who will fill workforce needs in the state.

The original legislation would have permitted all state-operated universities to offer in-state tuition rates to these students, but that was amended so that only Norfolk State and Virginia State would be permitted to do so.

Mike Cherry, a GOP delegate from Colonial Springs who was a sponsor of the legislation, told the Virginia Mercury that “we wanted the legislation to be very narrowed, because we were trying to help our HBCUs to recruit highly qualified people for the high-demand jobs that are available here in Virginia.”

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