Hello friends, I received this message from my colleague in Women Studies at UCF. Although the research is about Florida I think it applies to all of us. Hope you like it. MC Santana Research on Black Women at Predominantly White Universities in Florida Dear Colleagues, Connie Lester, editor of the Florida Historical Quarterly, shared with me this link to Stephanie Evans' recently published article, "'I Was One of the First to See Daylight': Black Women at Predominantly White Colleges and Universities in Florida since 1959." : http://plaza.ufl.edu/drevans/FHQ.htm Because of the policy implications of this research, the editors of FHQ have allowed Dr. Evans to post a web version of the article. As you will see, she explores faculty and student populations and considers many aspects of race and gender in higher education. This is an important article for us, and I hope that those of you interested in questions of race and gender on our campus and in Florida will take a look. Lisa Logan Dr. M.C. Santana Associate Professor of Journalism Nicholson School of Communication University of Central Florida P. O. Box 161344 Orlando, FL 32816-1344 FAX (407) 823-6360 and WORK (407) 823-2838 >>> Pearlie Strother-Adams <[log in to unmask]> 10/02/06 2:08 PM >>> -----Original Message----- From: FOR THE MINORITIES AND COMMUNICATION DIV. OF AEJMC [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Pearlie Strother-Adams Sent: Monday, October 02, 2006 12:21 PM To: [log in to unmask] Subject: Re: Panel & Book: Racism in Communication Classrooms Great! I will work on it this week and look forward to other suggestions. Thanks to all of you for your comments and more. I am happy that we are looking to this topic as a panel. I get the sense that in these times we need to more vigilant at working towards the greater respect and acceptance in the classroom as professionals. Inevitably, what we see in the classroom mirrors what we see outside of the classroom or visa versa. I do believe we have plenty of meat for both a panel and an anthology. I would like to see personal stories. We need to share with the world of academia how we have been often forced to forge our way in the classroom at predominately European American institutions. Perhaps, there is a need for critical analysis as well. In this case we might organize the personal pieces around particular themes or content that would allow for such scholarly, critical analysis that would draw upon theory. Perhaps, we could look to those that are grounded in theory in these areas to make such contributions. -----Original Message----- From: FOR THE MINORITIES AND COMMUNICATION DIV. OF AEJMC [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of E. K. Daufin Sent: Friday, September 29, 2006 2:35 PM To: [log in to unmask] Subject: Panel & Book: Racism in Communication Classrooms Prof. Pearlie & MACers, Yes, I too have had those experiences. I was in fact racially harassed out of Durango, Colorado as a prof. & newspaper adviser at Fort Lewis College. Prof. Pearlie, would you: 1. Send a couple of sentences to Prof. Camilla Gant to describe the panel as you perceive it and ideas for co-sponsorship with other AEJ divisions/commissions/interest groups and industry groups? 2. Would you write up and send to the listserv a call for book chapter proposals (model it on other book calls you have seen perhaps at conference, etc.) perhaps with the working title "Racism in Communication Classrooms." Once you get the chapter proposals I would suggest you solicit the advice/support of Drs. Cliff Wilson and Felix Gutierrez and others in our division (There are many...working fast on a Friday afternoon -- no disrespect dear colleagues!) who have had successful anthologies published and ask how we may be able to do the same with this project. I would like to be on the panel and one of the chapter authors in the anthology! Rev. Dr. E-K. Daufin, Professor Department of Communications MAC Membership Chair Alabama State University 915 South Jackson St. Montgomery, AL 36101-0271 334.229.6885 Lectures, Performances, Workshops, Consultation: http://home.earthlink.net/~ekdaufin/ Want More Energy? Relaxation? Motivation? Balance Your Brain Chemistry, Here's How: http://ekdaufin.isagenix.com 78% Discounted Afrocentric Photoart Calendar http://www.nappynewyear.com -----Original Message----- From: FOR THE MINORITIES AND COMMUNICATION DIV. OF AEJMC [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Pearlie Strother-Adams Sent: Friday, September 29, 2006 12:30 PM To: [log in to unmask] Subject: Re: Perspectives: Improving Race Relations One Journalism Class At A Time Dear Mac Members: Recently, I had an incident in the classroom that left me in a quandary. I won't go into specifics, but it made me think it would be good to put together an anthology that would feature stories on incidents involving race in the classroom. I believe this would make an interesting publication and would serve as a much needed dialogue around issues of race and diversity in the classroom and perhaps on university campuses. So often I have experienced what Prof. Willingham talks about in her piece as I have discussed issues of race and diversity in the classroom. It can be a very difficult task. Some white students will fold their arms in defiance and others may even show their anger and belligerence in their discussion. Often just the presence of a person of color in the classroom as an authority figure is a problem for some. Let me know what the rest of you think. Of course this would make a good panel as well. Please, let me know what the rest of you think. Prof. Pearlie Strother-Adams -----Original Message----- From: FOR THE MINORITIES AND COMMUNICATION DIV. OF AEJMC [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Journalism Department Sent: Thursday, September 28, 2006 9:26 AM To: [log in to unmask] Subject: Perspectives: Improving Race Relations One Journalism Class At A Time Dear MAC Member: My university diversity officer sent me the article below. I thought some of you might be interested in reading it. --- Lillie Fears Current News Perspectives: Improving Race Relations One Journalism Class At A Time By Breea C. Willingham Sep 28, 2006, 06:56 I was standing in line in the Dollar Tree store recently when a blonde-haired little girl who looked to be about 5 years old flashed a toothless smile at me. ³Hello,² she said. ³You have a black face. How did you get that black face?² Iım usually quick with a comeback, but the girl caught me off guard. After pausing for a few minutes I simply replied, ³I was born with it just like you were born with your white face.² ³Oh,² the little girl said, and went about her business. Imagine that little girl in my classroom 13 years from now. I recognize that little girl in a few of my students. Iım an African-American faculty member on a predominantly White campus in a town where less than 5 percent of the population is minority. Many of my students are from White suburban communities or small towns, where diversity is not an issue because there is none. For many of them, their first experiences with minorities and discussions about race happen in my classroom. Getting my students to talk about race is challenging, at best, on most days. And on the days when my students write papers where they call Black people ³coloreds² or say the majority of crimes in the United States are committed by Black men, that goal seems more frustrating than attainable. The biggest challenge for me is figuring out how to use those frustrations as learning tools and examples of precisely why diversity is needed across the curriculum. Just as newsrooms across the nation celebrate Time Out for Diversity and Accuracy once a year, journalism educators need to be reminded why they have to bring these issues to the classroom. Iıve always been passionate about issues dealing with race, ethnicity and diversity, and how they relate to the media. I covered these matters as a reporter for the Times Union in Albany, and I work hard to incorporate them into my courses. For instance, during an exercise in my ³Women, Minorities and the Media² class I drew four columns on the blackboard and labeled each one African-American, Asian American, American Indian or Hispanic. I then asked the students to call out stereotypes for each group. The students had no problem calling out stereotypes such as ³lazy,² ³like to eat fried chicken² and ³canıt speak English well.² But when I drew a fifth column for White people and asked for the stereotypes, the students were hard pressed to find any. I repeated the exercise asking for positive attributes for each group; the lists for the minorities were considerably shorter. At the end I asked my students why it was so easy for them to point out the negatives and not the positives. They all blamed the media for portraying negative images of minorities. I try to teach my students that before they can even begin to report on and write about race-related issues, they have to be willing to talk about them first and confront their prejudices. Teaching that lesson isnıt always easy, and I even became discouraged when I read course evaluations from last fall semester where some students criticized me for talking about diversity too much in class. But then I read one studentıs paper in the spring semester. ³Because of this class I feel better prepared to deal with many social issues and situations, especially race, on a day-to-day basis,² the student wrote. I felt an overwhelming sense of satisfaction knowing I at least reached one. My efforts so far have taught me that adding diversity to the curriculum is more than just adding a new course to the roster, and simply having a ³Women, Minorities and the Media² course is not enough. Iım learning itıs more about changing the way students think about and look at diversity issues, and challenging their biases. Professors also need to learn before they can deal with these issues as an educator; they need to acknowledge and challenge their own biases. Although I have my moments when I feel like I want to give up trying to teach diversity to the next generation of journalists, my passion for the issue wonıt let me. And on the days when I feel my efforts are in vain, I remember the advice a colleague recently gave me: ³Youıre the only education some of these students will ever get on race issues. I donıt know if thatıs more frustrating than consoling, but I see it as a legitimate chance for you to make a difference in some of their lives and in the world around you. Yeah, it seems small-scale, but if the worldıs gonna change, itıs going to be one person at a time. At least youıre doing some good things to try to initiate that change. Keep at it.² And so I do. Breea C. Willingham spent 10 years as a reporter for papers in the Carolinas and New York State. She is now a journalism professor at St. Bonaventure University in Allegany, N.Y. İ Copyright 2005 by DiverseEducation.com