Two years ago, was preparing to dive into her National Science Foundation-funded on historically black colleges and university (HBCU)聽students.

Now, her research has culminated in a report recently published by the Rutgers Center for Minority Serving Institutions (CMSI), through which she is a visiting scholar. Wilkerson, an assistant professor of higher education at UCF, is the lead author of .

The report, co-authored by postdoctoral scholar , highlights the perspectives of Black youth voters at Florida HBCUs and how they engage with politics to effect change. Their research synthesized input from Black youth voters in the 18-29 age range, examining the civic engagement discourse and initiatives they value the most.

鈥淗BCUs have shaped elections and the entire political landscape but are often ignored by researchers,鈥 Entress says. 鈥淭his research sheds light on how students at HBCUs form their political opinions, how they vote and how they feel about political messaging.鈥

The report also offers a set of recommendations for researchers, practitioners, postsecondary educational institutions, and nonpartisan voting organizations with the goal of informing their comprehensive understanding of political socialization 鈥 or what influences the beliefs, actions and values 鈥 of the Black youth voter demographic.

In conducting their research, Wilkerson and Entress traveled to select Florida HBCUs to administer surveys and focus groups with a total of 118 participants. Students were asked about political socialization, relevant political issues, political advertisements, and the importance of culturally relevant messaging.

The researchers found six critical themes emerged from their study:

  1. Digital Messaging Doubts: Participants found messaging on social media to be untrustworthy.
  2. Campaign Messaging Failures: Negative campaign advertisements tend to instill a heightened sense of uncertainty toward the sender.
  3. Historical Meaning of Voting: Young voters now prefer to vote only when they feel they can trust elected officials鈥 commitment to advancing their interest rather than voting to participate.
  4. Voter Apathy Doesn鈥檛 Stop Voter Activism: Participants may not vote if there is no candidate they feel strongly about. Instead, they might engage in other forms of civic participation, such as protesting.
  5. Political Party Dissonance: Young voters tend to take a more critical standpoint on partisanship.
  6. Administrative Voting Burdens: Increased bureaucratic challenges that Black college-aged individuals might experience can affect their voting engagement.

鈥淭here hasn’t really been any research done regarding the impact of culturally relevant political messaging on Black youth,鈥 Wilkerson says. 鈥淭hey provide a unique opportunity for us to see into the future because Generation Z is among the largest group of voters and incoming voters. If they are engaged in a way that we don’t understand and democracy is going to be in their hands, we have to ensure that we are examining their evolution today and not being afraid of their revolution in the future. I think it’s so important that we go beyond just the cliches of what we think we know about these voters by offering a more comprehensive understanding of them.鈥

Insight gleaned from participants in their study showed that while one of the most amplified political messages 鈥 鈥淕o vote!鈥 鈥 is simple and has remained largely unchanged, it has become stale to young voters, as they don鈥檛 need to be told to vote. The voters want people to know where they stand on important issues and seek accountability for action that addresses them.

鈥淥ne participant stunned all of us by saying, 鈥榃e don’t care about you trying to be relatable, we just want you to be reliable,鈥欌 Wilkerson says. 鈥淲e’re giving them the same message that was given to my mother and the one that I absorbed, and we haven’t changed it. When we think about all the opportunities and resources that are spent on encouraging people to be civically engaged, the bulk of it is spent on messaging 鈥 yet the message of 鈥榡ust go vote鈥 is wrong for this generation. I think this finding is going to get people to reimagine political messaging in the future.鈥

And while Florida polling data showed that the Black youth demographic represented a low voter turnout in Florida, no one seems to have asked Black youths why this was the case 鈥 something Wilkerson and her team sought to understand.

They found voter apathy doesn鈥檛 stop voter activism, but voting for the 鈥渓esser evil鈥 is no longer satisfactory. The participants in the researchers鈥 study would rather engage in other forms of political activism, such as protesting, to make their voices heard.

Wilkerson says civic engagement constitutes more than just voting and can include protesting, giving to a campaign or volunteering. However, much more weight is typically put on voting.

鈥淏lack youth voters are civically engaged; they just may not be engaged according to how we want them to be,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hey’re very in tune with using their socialization to engage how they want to and when they want to. We are very interested in elevating and amplifying their voices. That鈥檚 what we’re bringing light to.鈥

Other findings indicate that Black youth voters in the study exercise a level of distrust regarding digital messaging on social media platforms and political candidates who employ negative campaign advertisements.

The recommendations found in the report are tailored to optimizing civic engagement efforts for HBCU student voters, HBCUs with civic engagement-focused centers, and those interested in strengthening the civic engagement and political messaging landscapes.

Each was intended to involve changing practices rather than creating programming to curtail any financial concerns postsecondary education institutions and other organizations might have.

Recommendations are divided into seven distinct categories that address improving civic engagement communication strategies, diversifying engagement approaches, elevating participation and learning, promoting civic accessibility and student involvement in educational institutions, and leveraging social media in political messaging. Each serves to strengthen the political landscape by actively engaging Black youth voters.

鈥淭he value of Dr. Wilkerson and Dr. Entress鈥 findings and practitioner takeaways is evident in this report, and I commend their dedication to this area of impactful research,鈥 says , dean of the College of Community Innovation and Education.

Wilkerson earned her doctorate in higher education and policy studies from UCF and her master鈥檚 and bachelor鈥檚 degrees in political science from Florida A&M University. She joined UCF鈥檚聽 in 2019.