Six HBCUs Forge New Path with Course-Sharing Partnership
The eHBCU consortium announced a strategic partnership with Acadeum on June 25, 2026, enabling students at member institutions to access online courses across the group while remaining enrolled at their home campus. This development addresses longstanding challenges in course availability and scheduling that often delay graduation for students at historically Black colleges and universities.
Founding of the eHBCU Consortium
eHBCU emerged in 2025 as the first fully digital consortium of its kind among HBCUs. Headquartered at Delaware State University, the initiative brings together six institutions committed to extending the distinctive HBCU educational experience beyond physical campuses. The consortium seeks to deliver career-focused, academically rigorous programs to learners regardless of location.
Founding members include Delaware State University, Alabama State University, Pensole Lewis College of Business and Design, Southern University and A&M College in Baton Rouge, Southern University at Shreveport, and Southern University at New Orleans. Each institution maintains its own accreditation, identity, and degree-granting authority while collaborating on shared resources.
Partnership Details with Acadeum
The new agreement leverages Acadeum's established course-sharing platform to facilitate seamless enrollment in approved online courses offered by partner schools. Students complete coursework from another eHBCU member without transferring institutions or losing progress toward their primary degree. Credits transfer directly back to the home institution, preserving financial aid eligibility and academic standing.
Administrators at participating campuses review and approve courses to ensure alignment with program requirements and quality standards. The platform supports flexible scheduling, including intersessions and additional terms, helping students recover credits or accelerate progress.
Participating Institutions and Their Roles
Delaware State University serves as the lead and headquarters for eHBCU. The university has secured significant funding, including a two-million-dollar grant from the Thurgood Marshall College Fund in 2025, to advance the consortium's digital infrastructure and program development.
The Southern University system contributes multiple campuses, expanding options in fields such as business, education, and sciences. Alabama State University adds depth in liberal arts and professional programs. Pensole Lewis College of Business and Design brings specialized expertise in design and entrepreneurship. Together, the group creates a diverse catalog of courses unavailable at any single campus.
How the Course-Sharing Process Works
Eligible students first consult with academic advisors at their home institution to identify needed courses. Approved options appear in a shared catalog powered by Acadeum. Enrollment occurs through the home school's registration system, with tuition and fees handled according to existing policies.
Faculty at the teaching institution deliver the course, while the home institution records the grade. Support services such as tutoring and advising remain available through the student's primary campus. This structure maintains the sense of community central to HBCU education.
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Addressing Barriers to Timely Graduation
Many HBCU students face obstacles including limited course sections, faculty shortages in specialized areas, and conflicts with work or family responsibilities. The partnership directly targets these issues by increasing access to required and elective courses on demand.
Research on similar course-sharing models shows improved retention and completion rates when students can enroll in needed classes without delay. The eHBCU initiative builds on earlier efforts by the Southern Regional Education Board to connect HBCUs and minority-serving institutions through shared online resources.
Benefits for Students and Families
Participants gain greater flexibility to balance academics with employment or personal obligations. Expanded course options can reduce time to degree, lowering overall costs and debt. Students also benefit from exposure to diverse faculty perspectives and peer networks across institutions.
Families appreciate the continued connection to a specific HBCU's culture and support systems while accessing a broader academic menu. The model preserves the unique mentorship and community elements that distinguish HBCU experiences.
Institutional Advantages and Collaboration
Member colleges expand their academic portfolios without incurring the full cost of developing every course independently. Revenue sharing arrangements through the platform help sustain participation. The consortium strengthens collective bargaining power for technology investments and faculty development.
Smaller or specialized campuses gain access to high-demand courses that complement their offerings. Larger institutions can share excess capacity. This collaborative approach mirrors successful regional models while remaining focused on HBCU priorities.
Broader Context in Higher Education
Course sharing has gained traction nationwide as institutions seek efficiency amid enrollment pressures and resource constraints. The eHBCU model adapts proven technology to serve institutions with shared missions and histories. It complements existing SREB-led efforts that have operated since 2022 across additional HBCUs and minority-serving institutions.
By prioritizing online delivery, the partnership responds to student demand for hybrid and fully remote options while upholding the residential and cultural strengths of participating campuses.
Future Outlook and Expansion Potential
Leaders anticipate gradual growth in course inventory and student participation as processes mature. Additional HBCUs may join the consortium, further enriching the shared catalog. Integration with workforce-aligned certificates and stackable credentials represents a natural next step.
Continued investment in platform enhancements and faculty training will support scalability. Observers note the potential for similar consortia in other regions or mission-aligned groups seeking to leverage collective strengths.
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Implications for Equity and Access
The initiative reinforces HBCUs' role in expanding educational opportunity for underrepresented populations. By removing geographic and scheduling barriers, more students can pursue degrees from institutions that have historically served as engines of social mobility.
Success metrics will likely include graduation rates, time to degree, and student satisfaction surveys. Early adoption data from comparable platforms suggest positive outcomes when implementation includes strong advising and clear communication.
