


"Before You Can Make a Dream
Come True,
You Must First Have One."
The Ronald E. McNair
Scholars Post-Baccalaureate Achievement Program is funded by the
U.S. Department of Education in honor of a remarkable man who dared
to make his dreams a reality.
Ronald Ervin McNair,
the second African American to fly in space, was born on October 21,
1950, in Lake City, South Carolina to Carl and Pearl McNair. In
1967, McNair graduated from Carver High School in South Carolina. He
attended North Carolina A&T State University in Greensboro, where,
in 1971, he graduated magna cum laude with a BS degree in physics.
In 1976 he earned his Ph.D. degree in physics from the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology. After gaining national recognition as a
physicist at Hughes Research Laboratories, Ronald McNair was one of
35 applicants selected from a pool of ten thousand for NASA's space
shuttle program. In 1984 McNair became a mission specialist aboard
the flight STS-11 of the shuttle Challenger, orbiting the earth 122
times. He was also a sixth degree black belt in karate and an
accomplished jazz saxophonist.
After his death in the Challenger explosion, the U.S. Congress named the newly established Post-Baccalaureate Achievement Program for Ronald E. McNair to encourage undergraduate students to enroll in graduate studies in order to earn a doctoral degree. The program targets low-income, first-generation and students from under-represented groups. This program is dedicated to the high standards of achievement inspired by Dr. McNair's life.