Cuthbert served as dean of women at
Talladega College from 1927 to 1930, and from 1928 to 1931, she completed a master's in psychology at
Columbia University during the summers. She got her PhD from Columbia
Teacher's College in 1942. After Cuthbert retired to
Plainfield, NH, she authored numerous volumes of poetry, children's books, and short stories, some of which are anthologized.
Research Dr. Cuthbert's research on black female college graduates, represented in her work
Education and Marginality: A Study of the Negro College Graduate, fills a vacuum in literature about the experiences of black college graduates during the 1930s and 1940s. Her work complements that of Charles S. Johnson's study
The Negro College Graduate published in 1938. Her dissertation focused on the experiences of black females at the intersection of race, gender and culture in context of college attainment. She conducted a comparative survey study of the experiences of black females who attained a college degree against those who never attended. Martin D. Jenkins critiques her work by claiming that while the focus on black females in college is critical, her methodology is not strong enough to make the work generalizable to the black experience. == Selected works ==