R.A.C.E. Mentoring Through Social Media

Forfatter: info mangler
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  • Format
  • Bog, paperback
  • Engelsk
  • 322 sider

Beskrivelse

A volume in Contemporary Perspectives on Access, Equity, and Achievement

The Ivory Tower is and can often be a lonely place for faculty of color. Social injustices run deep and are entrenched within academia. Faculty of color (FOC), more

specifically Black and Hispanic, often lament about the ‘Black/Brown’ tax that frequently takes its toll both personally and professionally, and pushes them out of the

academy. Similar to trends in P-12 settings, educators of color in postsecondary contexts represent less than 10% of the profession. In essence, we are an anomaly and

the implications of this are clear and dire, as evidenced by persistent achievement, access, and expectation gaps within the academy.

Scholars of color (SOC), at all stages, but particularly during doctoral training, frequently struggle to not just survive, but to thrive, in the academy. Too many fail to earn

their doctoral degree, with many wearing the All But Dissertation (ABD) as a badge of honor. Although ABD is not a degree, many scholars of color receive inadequate

mentoring, often substandard in comparison to the hand-holding White students receive, which leaves far too many doctoral students of color lost, bewildered, angry,

indignant, and defeated. This righteous indignation is justified, but excused away using the myth of meritocracy and colorblind notions of success; followed by a myriad of

problems steeped with victim blaming, as noted in the classic Presumed Incompetent: The Intersections of Race and Class for Women in Academia (Gutiérrez y Muhs,

Niemann, González, & Harris, 2012). The aforementioned work was not the first treatise on higher education and how the non-status quo, along with those grappling with

oppression and double standards, experience the profession called higher education. Moreover, The Chilly Climate (Sandler, Silverberg, & Hall, 1996) report, which

focused on females, was also telling, but not enough was addressed and disclosed about females of color, until version

two. But these issues do not stop with females of color, but instead, extend to all faculty of color.

R.A.C.E. Mentoring, a social media Facebook group, with several subgroups (see Figures 1 and 2) was created by

Donna Y. Ford, Michelle Trotman Scott, and Malik S. Henfield in 2013, to tackle the numerous thorny and contentious

issues and challenges in higher education. We began by intentionally attending to the needs of students enrolled at

mostly White universities, as well as those who attended historically Black colleges and universities, while keeping the

unique nuances and challenges of each setting in mind. We wanted scholars of color to thrive in both. Fondly and

affectionately called RM, our charge and challenge is to affirm the dignity and worth of scholars of color. Additionally,

we recognize that there are scholars outside of academe, and their contributions as well to impact and affect change

for Black and Brown people inside and outside of academe need to be acknowledged. These scholars are community

organizers, activists, P-12 teachers, and families. It truly takes a village…

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