The Political Agitator

Dancy Communications Network – The DCN News Blog/Online TV

Archive for the ‘College Round Up Tarboro NC’ Category

Tarboro NC – 2012 College Round-Up Saturday March 10, 2012. Learn More Through An Online Interview With Dianne Valentin, Co-Founder & Executive Director The Black Heritage Museum & Cultural Center, Inc.

Posted by Curmilus Dancy II (Butch) on March 7, 2012

Dancy Communications Network College Round-Up Q & A

Question (Q). Will you share briefly a little about what is The Black Heritage Museum & Cultural Center, Inc.

Answer (A). The Black Heritage Museum & Cultural Center, Inc. (BHMACC) is a nonprofit organization with federal 501 (c) 3 tax-exempt status. The BHMACC is being developed (yes, we are still in development) because we understand the need for an independent institution that reflects and supports our rich and diverse history.

Our mission is to document and preserve Black heritage, culture, and scholarship and use it to encourage, empower, and uplift current and future generations through scholarly engagement, art, and artistic expression while cultivating critical thought.  

I developed four cornerstones that we will use to build a strong institution upon.

Education: Because we believe and have historically believed that education is of the highest importance. 

Economic Empowerment: Even though opportunities may have been deferred or denied, we believe in being prepared and trained to take advantage of them. 

Unity: It has historically been the key to our survival and is something it seems that we must relearn

Faith: Without faith we could not, would not have survived all that we have as a people

Do you remember when we started and maintained strong institutions like banks, insurance companies, colleges? Remember Maggie L. Walker who founded the first bank ever founded by a black woman in the U.S. and it still exists, just with another name. It still exists because of unity in the community back then.  She made loans to black businesses, she made loans to students, and she made loans to people to buy houses.

Ms. Walker started the St. Luke Penny Savings Bank in 1903 with $9,430 in deposits gathered from members of the Independent Order of St. Luke, an African-American benevolent society. Consolidated Bank & Trust Co. is the current name of the bank she started. 

Speaking of unity, while many of the largest black-owned banks went under during the Great Depression, Ms. Walker’s bank survived, in part by merging with two smaller, black-owned banks in 1930, when it was renamed Consolidated Bank & Trust.

I know that I haven’t been brief, but I had to give a historic point of reference. I would also like to share our vision with you so that your audience can get a sense of what we are trying to accomplish, and bring to the communities that we serve. We are developing and with everyone’s help will become the type of strong, well rounded institution like we used to have in our culture and within our communities. I am faithfully committed to that. 

As a museum it will engage in the acquisition, exhibition, preservation, and study of works of artistic, scientific, and historic value.

As a cultural center it will engage in social, intellectual, and artistic activities that reflect our impact on society, its growth and development.

As an education center it will elevate and advance discussion on our history and heritage, engage in discourse to advance our cultural, technical, and scientific knowledge through scholarship.

We need an independent place; to document our cultural contributions and accomplishments, to assure an accurate depiction of our participation in this society, while providing a place for scholars and performers to share their knowledge, gifts, and talents with everyone.

We are taking steps to create that independent space. We acknowledge that even the building blocks need rebuilding. Yet, this is where we are beginning. Albeit a virtual beginning, we have to start somewhere.

Folks can visit our website at www.bhmacc.org

Q. How did the College Round-Up become into existence in Edgecombe County?

A. Before 2001, even as a strong family keenly focused on education, with many educators in their family, the Whitehead / Taylor family which is based in Tarboro, had encountered what they noticed to be difficulties with their student family members gaining access to college preparation. 

They correctly assumed that if their student family member was facing obstacles, surely other students who didn’t have anyone advocating for them would be having similar, if not even more difficult problems preparing for and getting into college or university.

In the Whitehead / Taylor family’s spirit of community service they began collaborating to find a vehicle that would best serve students who had be overlooked, marginalized in one way or another, and in some cases discriminated against when it came time to engage in and be guided on using their high school career to prepare for a post-secondary education.

Bob Whitehead began using his networking skills to bring colleges and universities to the table of discussion. He shared with them that there were students out there who just were never given a chance to prepare or be prepared for college. He explained to the colleges that they may need a little remedial assistance in the beginning since they had not been well served by the school systems, and that they may need financial assistance due to the fact that many were from communities that have been systematically marginalized within our economic system.

He challenged the colleges and universities to put their admissions and financial aid capabilities behind their community engagement rhetoric and give these students a chance to get a college education. They were asked to waive their application fees, because many students could not afford to pay twenty-five to one hundred dollars for applications to college over and over again.

Initially several colleges showed up at the Tarboro High School auditorium knowing that they were going to be meeting with students and their families who had faced and were still facing challenges. I commend and applaud those Historically Black Colleges and Universities that came through from the very beginning for the first College Round-Up in 2001!

Q. How many years has the College Round-Up been held in Edgecombe County?

A. This will be the twelfth year that the College Round-Up has been held in Edgecombe County.

Q. Who were the previous speakers for the event?

A. My gosh, I would probably, very unintentionally, leave some folks out. Let me see if I can remember some of them. I hope anyone not named forgives me this senior moment. Clifton Davis, Judge Glenda Hatchett, Uniqua Wade, Kaiem Frink, (both Uniqua and Kaiem came through the College Round-Up program), Kwame Brown, I think Willie Gilchrist, Arjun Makhijani, Kim Coles, and this year Judge Betty Staton and Rep. Jean Farmer-Butterfield (who has been a previous keynote) will join us.    

Q. What is the purpose of the College Round-Up Day in Edgecombe County?

A. The bottom line purpose is to bring students and their families to a place where they can meet with colleges and universities that have a sensitivity to some of the issues and barriers that have faced marginalized, poor and minority students over the years. Students who don’t historically fall into those categories attend and benefit from it as well.

Q. How has the participation been over the years?

A. It started with about eighty people and then grew to about two hundred while it was being held at Tarboro High School. By the time we moved it to Edgecombe Community College it had grown to about eight hundred and now between fifteen hundred and two thousand people come to the College Round-Up.

Q. Is the College Round-Up Day limited to Edgecombe County students and/or a certain age group?

A. By no means do we limit access to anyone who wishes to attend. There are students from all over North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, Washington, D.C who attend the College Round-Up. One year we even had students from New Orleans, Colorado and California.

Students who are Freshmen, Sophomores, and Juniors in high school attend the College Round-Up to become familiar with the schools and attend the break-out sessions, which are always really informative. They find it helpful to hear from the colleges and universities firsthand what type of courses they should be taking during their high school careers to be successful during their college careers.  And of course high school Seniors attend to focus directly on getting accepted into college.

We even have some middle school students who have been in attendance as sort of a field trip to see what happens in that type of setting, to see what they have to look forward to and work toward.

Older college age students have attended so that they can speak with the college representatives about transferring to or starting attendance at their schools. So we have no age issues. Everyone can come on down to see what the College Round-Up might have to offer them.

Q. How many colleges and other are scheduled to attend this year’s College Round-Up?

A. We have about twenty colleges and others committed to attend so far. Usually between twenty-five and thirty schools show up. Actually there are schools that consider themselves part of our College Round-Up family and just show up every year, that sort of commitment to our program makes us happy!

Q. Will you share how some students have benefitted from attending the event?

A. Some students and their families have told us that the benefits experienced by attending the College Round-Up have been immeasurable.  Students have said that they had never been in that type of setting before. From a more tangible perspective, we have students who have been accepted in to college or university on the spot, we have students who have gone on to complete their undergraduate work, engage in their Master’s, go on to become educators themselves, become lawyers, college professors. I am so proud of them, even though I don’t get to meet each and every one of them.

Q. Do you have anything you would like to add?

A. Just that I appreciate you for showing up and documenting our work. I am proud to be able to say that I know someone who has started a communications network and that you support our efforts!

I really just want people to show up so that they might benefit from attending the College Round-Up. Parents, teachers, everyone needs to bring the students that they know who need to prepare for a college education. We are a holistic event if I may use the term. We have the morning program which gets everyone going and into the spirit of the event, we have very enthusiastic college and university representatives who are wonderfully competitive, and we have great facilitators of our break-out sessions who want our students to be well rounded when they go off to fulfill their dreams of a post-secondary education, whether it is at a community college, a technical institute, or a four year college or university.

I can’t thank you enough for doing this and supporting us the way that you have over the years.

Dianne Valentin, Co-Founder & Executive Director
The Black Heritage Museum & Cultural Center, Inc.

dianne.valentin@bhmacc.org 
www.bhmacc.org 
404.431.9593 

See Related:

Press Release: THE BLACK HERITAGE MUSEUM & CULTURAL CENTER, INC. PRESENTS THE 2012 COLLEGE ROUND-UP ON MARCH 10, 2012 

College Round-Up

Posted in College Round Up 2012, College Round Up Tarboro NC, Edgecombe Community College Tarboro NC, From the Publisher, Online Interview | Leave a Comment »

College Round-Up 2006 Judge Glenda Hatchett

Posted by Curmilus Dancy II (Butch) on February 27, 2012

Click on pictures to view more pictures.

image

See Related:

Press Release: THE BLACK HERITAGE MUSEUM & CULTURAL CENTER, INC. PRESENTS THE 2012 COLLEGE ROUND-UP ON MARCH 10, 2012

Posted in 2006, College Round Up 2012, College Round Up Tarboro NC | Leave a Comment »

Press Release: THE BLACK HERITAGE MUSEUM & CULTURAL CENTER, INC. PRESENTS THE 2012 COLLEGE ROUND-UP ON MARCH 10, 2012

Posted by Curmilus Dancy II (Butch) on February 22, 2012

Press Release

Contact: Dianne Valentin
Phone: (404) 431-9593

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
9 A.M. EST, February 17, 2012

THE BLACK HERITAGE MUSEUM & CULTURAL CENTER, INC. PRESENTS THE 2012 COLLEGE ROUND-UP ON MARCH 10, 2012

TARBORO, NC, FEBRUARY 17, 2012: The Black Heritage Museum & Cultural Center, Inc. (BHMACC) will be presenting its annual College Round-Up event on the Tarboro Campus of Edgecombe Community College located at 2009 West Wilson Street, Tarboro, NC 27886. This year’s event will take place on Saturday, March 10, 2012 from 8:00 am early registration until 3:00 pm. Colleges and Universities will be interviewing students and accepting applications, (application fees waived at the event only). Break-out sessions and workshops on everything from Financial Aid to Self Esteem will be going on simultaneously. Guest speakers during the morning program this year are North Carolina State Representative Jean Farmer-Butterfield and New York Judge, the Honorable Betty Staton. Judge Staton is originally from rural Edgecombe County in North Carolina. The morning program begins at 9:00 am.

The College Round-Up was founded by Robert “Bobby” Whitehead and his family in the late 1990s and became a program of the Black Heritage Museum & Cultural Center, Inc. in 2006. It has gone from a small gathering of several hundred coming together in the Tarboro High School gymnasium to well over a thousand in attendance each year since 2008. The College Round-Up was started to give students access to colleges and universities that were willing to take a holistic look at them and give them a chance. More often than not, they were students who had been marginalized in one way or another. Students who felt that they dare not hope for the possibility, and would never have the opportunity to fulfill their dreams of a college education. The College Round-Up program has helped close to 2,000 students realize that dream since 2006. If you are a student, have a student, or know a student interested in college, we’ll see you at the College Round-Up!

-End-

THE BLACK HERITAGE
MUSEUM & CULTURAL
CENTER, INC.

See related:

Tarboro NC – The Black Heritage Museum & Cultural Center, Inc. Presents 2012 College Round-Up Edgecombe Community College Saturday March 10, 2012

College Round Up

Note: The above videos have been removed. C. Dancy II – DCN Publisher

Posted in College Round Up Tarboro NC, The Black Heritage Museum & Cultural Center, Inc. | Leave a Comment »

Tarboro NC – The Black Heritage Museum & Cultural Center, Inc. Presents 2012 College Round-Up Edgecombe Community College Saturday March 10, 2012

Posted by Curmilus Dancy II (Butch) on February 18, 2012

image

See related:

Stomp The Yard Step Show Edgecombe Community College Tarboro Friday March 11, 2011

College Round Up

Note: The above videos have been removed. C. Dancy II – DCN Publisher

Posted in 2012, College Round Up Tarboro NC, Edgecombe Community College Tarboro NC, Judge Betty Staton, Rep. Jean Farmer-Butterfield | Leave a Comment »

Video: Tarboro NC – College Round Up Comedian Actor Kim Coles Featuring Edgecombe County High School Community Gospel Choir

Posted by Curmilus Dancy II (Butch) on April 6, 2011

Click on picture to view video.

image

See related:

Stomp The Yard Step Show Edgecombe Community College Tarboro Friday March 11, 2011

College Round Up

Posted in College Round Up Tarboro NC, Comediane Actress Kim Coles, Edgecombe Community College, Education, HBCU - Historical Black Colleges and Universities | Leave a Comment »

Video – Stomp The Yard Step Show Edgecombe Community College Tarboro Friday March 11, 2011

Posted by Curmilus Dancy II (Butch) on April 5, 2011

Click on the picture to watch video.

image

See related:

Stomping The Yard Step Show 1st Annual College Round Up Event Videos

Posted in College Round Up Tarboro NC, Edgecombe Community College Tarboro NC, Stomping The Yard Step Show Competition, Video | Leave a Comment »

Kim Coles Actress And Comedian Was Off The Chain At The 10th Annual College Round Up In Tarboro NC

Posted by Curmilus Dancy II (Butch) on March 12, 2011

If you missed the 10th Annual College Round Up this morning you missed a treat. Kim Coles actress and comedian was off the chain.

Coles’ message was right on!! She said she came to play with the students and to encourage them to go to college. She said she was going to tell the students to do as she say do and not as she did.

Coles stressed the purpose of why college is a necessity these days and not a choice. She talked about how she was a college dropout. She attended one college for 3 months and then on to North Carolina Central University (NCCU) for 4 months. She said she didn’t stay in school because she didn’t know what she wanted to do. She asked the standing room only crowd what did they want to be and she fielded answers from a couple of students. After they told her what they wanted to be, she said she was jealous of them because they were still in school and already knew what they wanted to be.

Coles said she began her career as a comedian and after 4 years she became an actress for “In Living Single.” She said because she does not have a college degree she find herself unemployed more than she is employed. She said she feels the need to go back to school and will probably do so by taking some night classes. She said right now she wants to do some of everything.

Coles said she stared out in the sitcom business but there is no more Sitcom shows for black folks. She said for example look at what have replaced Sitcoms such “The Game.” She said look at how many black folks showed up at the Grammys, maybe 3.

Coles said said she is working on starting a show on a popular TV station but she could not talk about it at the moment.

Coles is a great speaker. I truly enjoyed her and would pay to hear her again since the event was open and fee to the public.

I am very much familiar with Cole’s father whom I have been knowing for many, many years. He did the invocation.

Coles talked about how her father and mother met in the registration line during their college days. I learned today that her mom is actually from Raleigh and was a school teacher however her dad is from Brooklyn, New York. She stressed to the students that even some good things can come out of just registering for college.

Coles told the students to wait on having babies, do little to no partying and the other and put their education first.

Posted in College Round Up Tarboro NC, Kim Coles Actor | Leave a Comment »

Stomping The Yard Step Show 1st Annual College Round Up Event Videos

Posted by Curmilus Dancy II (Butch) on March 12, 2011

If you missed the step show you missed a treat. Get your video today. See me at the College Round Up in the morning or you may inbox me or message me on Facebook or call me at 252.314.5484. However text me between 9:00 am – 11:00 while I am at the College Round Up.

 

 

Posted in College Round Up Tarboro NC, Step Show Competition, Stomping The Yard Step Show Competition | Leave a Comment »

Kim Coles to headline annual College Round-Up – Source: The Daily Southerner

Posted by Curmilus Dancy II (Butch) on March 10, 2011

TARBORO — College admissions and financial aid is in the air as the 10th Annual College Round-Up draws closer and closer.
Saturday from 9 a.m. – 3 p.m. area students will have the opportunity to apply to college and get money to fund their education. (Read more)

See related:

College Round-Up “Stomping the Yard” Step Show Competition Friday March 11, 2011

Posted in College Round Up Tarboro NC, Kim Coles Actor, Stomping The Yard Step Show Competition | Leave a Comment »

College Round-Up “Stomping the Yard” Step Show Competition Friday March 11, 2011

Posted by Curmilus Dancy II (Butch) on March 9, 2011

image

COLLEGE ROUND-UP

 

“Stomping the Yard’’

Step Show Competition

Friday, March 11, 2011
at 6:00 p.m.

Keihin Auditorium

Edgecombe Community College

2009 W Wilson ST

Tarboro, NC

$7.00 advance/$10.00 door

Contact: faysmith@netzero.net

                    bfbryant@nrms.k12.nc.us

 

252.883-2667/252.452-0356 after 5pm

 

Advance tickets can be purchase day of event from 12:00-4:00 p.m. at

 Keihin Auditorium

Posted in College Round Up Tarboro NC, Edgecombe Community College, Step Show Competition, Stomping The Yard Step Show Competition | Leave a Comment »

College Round-Up “Stomping the Yard” Step Show Competition

Posted by Curmilus Dancy II (Butch) on February 19, 2011

image

COLLEGE ROUND-UP

 

“Stomping the Yard’’

Step Show Competition

Friday, March 11, 2011
at 6:00 p.m.

Keihin Auditorium

Edgecombe Community College

2009 W Wilson ST

Tarboro, NC

$7.00 advance/$10.00 door

Contact: faysmith@netzero.net

                    bfbryant@nrms.k12.nc.us

 

252.883-2667/252.452-0356 after 5pm

 

Advance tickets can be purchase day of event from 12:00-4:00 p.m. at

 Keihin Auditorium

Posted in College Round Up Tarboro NC, Edgecombe Community College, Keihin Auditorium, Stomping The Yard Step Show Competition | Leave a Comment »

Tarboro NC – Colleges come to town for round-up day

Posted by Curmilus Dancy II (Butch) on March 13, 2009

The Black Heritage Museum and Cultural Center is holding its eighth annual College Round-Up Day Saturday in Tarboro.

More than 20 colleges and universities will have representatives in Keihin Auditorium from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Edgecombe Community College. (Rocky Mount Telegram)

See related:

Judge Glenda Hatchett

Posted in Announcement, College Round Up Tarboro NC | Tagged: , , , | Leave a Comment »

 
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 250 other followers