The mission of the Strengthening Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU) Title III Program is to enhance the academic programs, fiscal management, and physical resources of the Valley Street Campus. Activities and services provided by the program address the enhancement of student support services, the integration of technology into curricula and instruction, and the improvement of physical facilities. Goals include increased student enrollment and retention, the achievement of students' educational goals, and expanded capabilities of information technology for students and faculty.
Valley Street Campus Administration Office
Ricky Tillis
Campus Director
256-549-8678
rtillis@yilunjianshe.com
Campus
256-549-8673
To schedule a tour of the Valley Street Campus, please email HBCU@yilunjianshe.com
Title III Grant Administration Office
Shameka Gilyard
Title III Director
256-549-8679
sgilyard@yilunjianshe.com
Tarva Vaughn
Program Facilitator
256-549-8674
tvaughn@yilunjianshe.com
Ariel McElwee
Instructional Technology Advisor
256-549-8681
amcelwee@yilunjianshe.com
Keana Howze
Title III Program Advisor
256-549-8670
khowze@yilunjianshe.com
Craig Carter
Computer Technician
256-549-8683
ccarter@yilunjianshe.com
Donna Adams
Clerk II
256-549-8667
dadams@yilunjianshe.com
The Title III Grant Administration Office is located in the Learning Resource Center (LRC) on the Valley Street Campus. For more information, individuals should contact the Title III Grant Administration Office, at 256-549-8667. The Title III Program is funded by the U.S. Department of Education through its Historically Black Colleges and Universities Program (HBCU).
Currently, the Valley Street Campus houses the following:
Air Conditioning and Refrigeration
Several academic courses
To schedule a tour of the Valley Street Campus, please email HBCU@yilunjianshe.com
Valley Street has a long and storied history in Etowah County. It opened its doors in 1960 as the Gadsden Vocational Trade School, a private vocational training school for Black Americans. It was founded by Eugene N. Prater, director of the Veterans Continuation Program for Negroes, in response to discontent expressed by Black veterans in Etowah County for being denied admission to the all-white Alabama School of Trades.
Eugene Ned Prater at the Valley Street Campus monument dedication in 2008
In 1972, the school was renamed Gadsden State Technical Institute. In October 1997, the school – now known as the Valley Street Campus – was designated as a Historically Black College or University (HBCU) by the U.S. Department of Education. The following year, the U.S. Department of Education’s Title III Program began on the Valley Street Campus. The mission of Title III is to further provide resources and support that will strengthen the quest for an individual’s successful completion of their goals by encouraging intellectual and technical skills of students and faculty.
Martin Luther King III speaks at the ceremony designating the Valley Street Campus as an HBCU
Eugene Ned Prater speaks during the ceremony attended by state and local government officials and community leaders.
Thurgood Marshall College Fund