HomeBlack Student Success Week

Black Student Success Week

April 20 through April 24

Students are invited to join our Black Student Success Week watch parties for the #TheBlackHour webinars, happening April 20-24 from 12:00 to 1:00 p.m. in SAB 107.

Come watch, learn, and be part of the conversation in community.


Black Student Success Week is a statewide annual initiative led through the California Community Colleges system that creates space to center the experiences, achievement, and academic success of Black and African American students. The week highlights conversations, strategies, and resources that support equity, belonging, and student success in higher education. The 2026 theme, “Revolution: (Re)Defining Black Student Success,” focuses on rethinking how institutions serve students and how Black student success is understood, supported, and advanced. 


Monday–Friday | 12–1 p.m. PT

Daily webinars will explore strategies, research, and practices that support Black student success in community colleges. These sessions are open to administrators, faculty, staff, practitioners, and students.

Monday–Friday | 1–2 p.m. PT

Immediately following each webinar, participants can join small-group discussion forums to reflect on the day’s topic, share insights, and continue the conversation in community.

Monday–Thursday | 6–7 p.m. PT

This student-centered series highlights resources, guidance, and conversations designed to help current and prospective college students succeed. 

Thursday, April 23, 2026

Advocacy Day offers participants an opportunity to engage virtually with elected officials and higher education policymakers about priorities related to Black student success. No previous advocacy experience is required. Training and resources will be provided.

Monday, April 20 2026 | 12-1pm

This session examines the rise of Black Serving Institutions (BSIs) in California, tracing the historical context and policy evolution through Senate Bill 1348, followed by the rapid growth of BSI-designated institutions across the state. Participants will hear directly from leaders at BSI colleges about how they are operationalizing Black Servingness. This conversation will explore how California institutions are adapting policy to drive campus-level transformation and redefine what it means to lead with intentionality in service of Black student success.

Register Here

Tuesday, April 21 2026 | 12-1pm

This session asserts return on investment (ROI) and economic mobility as critical measures of Black student success. Speakers will examine how institutions must shift their framing away from access-focused metrics toward outcomes that produce true economic mobility. Through a discussion of completion, workforce alignment, wages, and long-term mobility, this conversation challenges higher education to redefine ROI as a structural commitment that ensures Black students experience tangible economic returns upon completion.

Register Here

Wednesday, April 22 2026 | 12-1pm

Transfer-level math remains one of the most significant academic barriers to completion for many students. This session focuses on teaching and learning strategies that support Black students’ success in these courses. Participants will learn how math pathways can be intentionally structured to accelerate progress, close completion gaps, and align instructional practice with Black Servingness. Panelists will discuss policy, pedagogy, and institutional redesign efforts that remove structural barriers while maintaining rigor.

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Thursday, April 23 2026 | 12-1pm

In this session, we will present findings from the 2025 Real College Basic Needs Survey, using disaggregated data to illustrate the most significant barriers faced by postsecondary students, including Black and African American students. This session will explore how institutions must operationalize support for food, housing, mental health, and financial stability needs, and develop these resources as part of institutional infrastructure rather than peripheral services. This discussion reframes student support as an institutional responsibility central to Black Servingness.

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Friday, April 24 2026 | 12-1pm

The closing session will focus on statewide student success outcomes for Black students. Participants will engage with current data on access, completion, transfer, and outcomes to assess both progress and the gaps that persist. The conversation will explore how institutions can use transparent, disaggregated data to drive improvement, inform policy, and advocate for sustained investment to continue driving outcomes for students and graduates. Finally, the session will advocate for documenting Black student success to ensure its continued growth and visibility, thereby rewriting and reclaiming the narrative.

Register Here