Schools

$1.5M Grant To Boost Black Male Education Majors At Bowie State University

BSU has become the 1st HBCU to receive a $1.5M grant from the U.S. Department of Education that supports Black Male education majors.

The Black Male Educators Project aims to increase the number of Black male teachers who are prepared to work with students in early childhood, elementary, secondary and special education with the knowledge, understanding and skills in ESOL.
The Black Male Educators Project aims to increase the number of Black male teachers who are prepared to work with students in early childhood, elementary, secondary and special education with the knowledge, understanding and skills in ESOL. (Getty Images)

BOWIE, MD — Bowie State University has received a $1.5 million grant from the U. S. Department of Education’s Augustus F. Hawkins Centers of Excellence Program to support The Bowie Black Male Educators Project. The university is one of only 12 institutions to receive this grant and is the only HBCU to be awarded a grant from the new program.

The Black Male Educators Project aims to increase the number of Black male teachers who are prepared to work with students in early childhood, elementary, secondary and special education with the knowledge, understanding and skills in English for Speakers of Other Languages. The university’s ability to focus more on Black male teachers will be boosted through curriculum program redesign and faculty development, made possible with the grant.

“It’s no secret that Black male teachers are in short supply,” said Dr. Julius L. Davis, founding director of Bowie State’s Black Male Educators Project and College of Education professor. “Blacks comprise 6 percent of all teachers and black men are less than 2 percent. This grant will enable us to recruit and prepare 50 Black male educators in early childhood/special education, elementary or secondary education who can provide culturally relevant instruction and work with students and families. Through our program redesign, we’ll create a pathway for Black male teachers to become certified in ESOL to meet the changing demographics in our schools."

Find out what's happening in Bowiefor free with the latest updates from Patch.

A redesigned curriculum will encompass all teacher education programs at BSU and reflect up-to-date research in the areas of race, ethnicity, culture, language, disability, technology and other experiential learning modes. The university will also develop five ESOL courses that will be used to prepare teacher candidates to become certified in ESOL.

“We’re at a tipping point in education and the need for Black male teachers has never been greater,” said Dr. Davis. “The Augustus F. Hawkins Centers of Excellence Grant along with our Black Male Teachers College Program, Right to Passage Program for boys at Annapolis Middle School, STEM programs and other initiatives will solidify Bowie State’s position as a national leader in preparing Black males to become teachers.”

Find out what's happening in Bowiefor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Bowie State’s Black Male Educators Project differs from similar programs across the nation because most do not work with middle and high school students; the participation from alumni, undergraduate and graduate students; and the bonds that have been established with organizations such as The Building Our Network of Diversity Project, National Association of Black Male Educators, Real Men Teach and others to address the issue.

“Every child in America deserves and needs a teacher who looks like them,” said Curtis Valentine, deputy director of the Progressive Policy Institute’s Reinventing America’s School Project. ”Fortunately, Bowie State University may very well be the answer. If their track record is any indication, the U.S. Department of Education’s historic grant to Bowie State and Dr. Julius Davis will invariably increase the number of Black men in education at a time when America’s inequitable education system needs them the most.”

Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.