Columbus & Dayton African American_February 2021 Edition

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tolerance hate-speech policy, more diversity among professors, support for Black mental health, a revitalization of the Africana-studies program, and mandatory undergraduate requirements for courses on race and racism in the United States. Across the country, we’ve seen similar pockets of change, some more radical than others. The University of Chicago announced that it would admit only Black-studies scholars into its English Ph.D. program for 2021, citing Black Lives Matter. Similarly, the Rhode Island School of Design said that it would hire ten new faculty members focussed on race, decolonization, and cultural representation—a move that was made possible by an anonymous donation large enough to pay their salaries for the next five years. The California State University system is phasing in a requirement that all students on its twenty-three campuses take at least one ethnic-studies course. The University of Pittsburgh required its first-year students to complete an online course on systemic antiBlack racism in the fall.

as before. They’ve insisted on confronting white power structures directly and challenging the myriad ways in which America’s racial hierarchy is ingrained in academic institutions. In November, about seven hundred and eighty students participated in a two-week strike at Haverford College, in response to what they saw as an insensitive e-mail from the school’s president, Wendy Raymond, who had been serving as the interim chief diversity officer at the time. The e-mail urged students not to participate in protests after police fatally shot Walter Wallace, Jr., a twenty-seven-year-old Uber Eats driver, during a domestic dispute near the college. Students ended their strike after receiving a commitment from college administrators to meet the majority of their demands.

official Twitter handle @BlackintheIvory have been inactive since September. Still, #BlackInTheIvory lives on, having taken on an identity that is larger than its founders. “The visibility of this hashtag allowed institutions to start to have conversations that people have been begging them to have for years,” Woods told me when I caught up with her in November. “I still get messages from people saying, ‘You gave me courage to finally say something.’ ”

Davis agreed, citing a recent speech she had given about #BlackInTheIvory at the University of Northampton, in England. “For so long we barely talked about racism,” she said. “Now I feel like that’s actually happening. This has opened the door in a White officials like Raymond aren’t the only really powerful way.” ones struggling. In August, after a difficult conversation with Shardé Davis over the Kristal Brent Zook is a professor of future of their movement, Joy Woods journalism at Hofstra University and the announced that she would no longer be author of three books, including “Color by associated with #BlackInTheIvory, removing Fox: The Fox Network and the Revolution in her name from the Web site and Twitter Black Television.” She is currently writing a account. Many who had donated funds felt family memoir. Students and faculty nationwide have betrayed, vowing to return merchandise expressed their unwillingness to continue on purchased on the site. Both the site and the Article from www.newyorker.com

COLUMBUS STATE EARNS PLACEMENT IN INAUGURAL YEAR-LONG RACIAL EQUITY LEADERSHIP ACADEMY The College’s participation in this new joint Achieving the Dream and USC Race and Equity Center initiative will support concrete next steps in institutional racial equity change. Columbus State Community College has been named as one of 10 leading community colleges in the nation to further its racial equity work through participation in a practitioner-guided Racial Equity Leadership Academy designed to break down institutional barriers to racially minoritized student success. The Academy will provide the College with critical opportunities to enhance and promote its commitment to outcomes, and intend to leverage this racial equity at every institutional level. experience as a key means of our integrated The Achieving the Dream and USC Race efforts to measurably improve diversity, and Equity Center Racial Equity Leadership equity and inclusion in everything that we Academy will engage selected Achieving do.” the Dream Network community college leadership teams in a year-long facilitated Columbus State’s engagement in the exploration of tools and tactics to scrutinize Academy will conclude in early 2022, and dismantle structures and policies that culminating in a comprehensive, prioritized hamper racially equitable student outcomes, racial equity action plan aligned with the through a deep focus on designing effective College’s student success and strategic strategies and projects to articulate principles plans. The College will share the lessons of racial equity into an actionable framework. learned during its year-long journey at the “Columbus State is ready to make our next 2022 national Achieving the Dream Network leap forward in racial equity change work DREAM conference. as a leading Achieving the Dream member college,” said Dr. David T. Harrison, “We are proud to welcome Columbus State president. “We are honored at ATD’s into the inaugural cohort of the Racial Equity selection of our team to build upon our Leadership Academy,” said Dr. Karen A. organizational commitment and progress Stoudt, president and CEO of Achieving advancing racially equitable student success the Dream. “Achieving the Dream believes 33

that a commitment to equity is tantamount to institutional transformation that leads to greater student outcomes. Columbus State’s commitment to embed anti-racism and racial equity into their campus culture exemplifies the systematic approach necessary to bring about change and builds on their strong student success work that was recognized with the Leah Meyer Austin Award in 2019.” Columbus State first joined the Achieving the Dream Network in 2012, becoming a Leader College in 2015, the Leah Meyer Austin Award winner in 2019, and a Leader College of Distinction in 2020. The Leah Meyer Austin Award is Achieving the Dream’s highest honor and recognized Columbus State’s double-digit improvement in student completion outcomes with an emphasis on lifting achievement rates among AfricanAmerican and low-income students.

The Columbus & Dayton African American February 2015 2021 The Columbus African American News Journal •• February


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Articles inside

James R. Williams: Pioneering Akron Judge and Civic Leader

6min
page 37

HBCU’s, COVID and You

8min
pages 35-36

A Crisis Within a Crisis: Police Killings of Black Emerging Adults

6min
page 34

Columbus State Earns Placement in Inaugural Year-Long Racial Equity Leadership Academy

4min
page 33

How Black Lives Matter Came to the Academy

12min
pages 31-32

The Kroger Co. Foundation Announces Racial Equity Fund Build It Together Partners

5min
page 29

Book Bags & E-Readers

4min
page 30

NMA Covid-19 Task Force on Vaccines and Therapeutics

7min
pages 26-28

Deja Vu: The Persisent Time Loop of Race, Inequality, Liberty and the Enduring Struggle to Create a More Perfect Union

7min
page 22

Study Shows When Housing Quality Is Poor, Children Suffer

3min
page 24

Work On Your Pandemic Recovery

4min
page 25

The Next Chapter

4min
pages 18-19

COVER STORY

4min
page 20

Legislative Update

4min
page 17

Infrastructure Pipeline, Not Just Create New Jobs Community Update from Franklin County Auditor’s Office

3min
page 16

Eugene Goodman: The Man Who Saved The Senate

5min
page 6

Black History Is About More Than Oppression

7min
pages 9-10

New HEAP Assistance Available

4min
page 12

Ohio History Connection Celebrates Black History Month

3min
page 11

Volunteers Stay Connected with Children Amid Pandemic

3min
pages 13-14

The Columbus Division of Police and Our City Need Prophetic Leadership With Vision

5min
page 7

Cleveland’s First Elected Official of African Descent

5min
page 8

Racial (In)Justice In Small Town Rural America

5min
page 5
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