Skip to main content

Florida Career College to Close

Florida Career College to Close Doug Lederman Fri, 01/26/2024 - 03:00 AM Byline(s) Doug Lederman from Inside Higher Ed https://ift.tt/avZRfLi

How Can We Talk About the Fall Right Now?

We originally intended this post to be another in our attempt to provide some context and guidance for those in higher education thinking about how to plan for and prepare for the fall.

And, then, last week George Floyd was brutally killed by a Minneapolis police officer, all of which was caught on camera. The country is on fire. People everywhere are rightly protesting a culture that continues to allow this to happen to black men. This week, much of our attention has necessarily, purposefully shifted from preparing for the fall to trying to understand how this kind of horrific act can continue to happen here.

It is difficult to write for a blog on higher education at a time like this. The challenges we face are part of a fundamental fabric and legacy of racism that continues to manifest daily in acts that range from the micro to the horrific.

In Assault on American Excellence, the former dean of Yale Law School, Anthony Kronman argues that questions of equity and access, of fairness and egalitarian values, should have no place in the aristocratic ideal of higher education, where all depends on excellence, not equality or equity. He argues that these are social and political questions that belong in the public sphere but not in higher education. It’s difficult to imagine how someone could so intentionally ignore the effect institutional and individual racism have on the success of our students of color. It’s difficult to imagine studying, succeeding, excelling not only in the shadow of Calhoun College but in the shadow of the violent killings of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and Ahmaud Arbery.

All of higher education saw with brutal clarity how many of our students were underserved when schools and colleges moved to remote instruction in spring 2020. Many of our most vulnerable students at schools all across the country had trouble accessing reliable and high-speed internet. Many of our students across the country could not find a quiet place to study, just as many more were needed to take on greater responsibilities to help support their families at home.

As if it was not painfully clear before, we all need to embrace what it means to be an inclusive learning community. As we think about the fall, we need to work to understand that good pedagogy is inclusive pedagogy, regardless of whatever mode we find ourselves in come September. We need to recognize that many of our students are being asked to learn while living through traumatic circumstances, events, and confrontations, conditions that make it virtually impossible to succeed without support and care.

This means reaching out to our students now. Asking them what they need. It means hearing our students’ stories and working to bring their voices into the conversation of the classroom in ways that include all voices. It means being a mentor and a voice of support for our students when they are faced with the horrible reality we are living through right now.

We cannot be successful in the fall or in the future if we do not recognize our need to stand with our students and understand what it means to ask them to learn in the shadow of George Floyd’s killing.

 

Show on Jobs site: 
Disable left side advertisement?: 
Is this diversity newsletter?: 
Is this Career Advice newsletter?: 
Advice Newsletter publication dates: 
Sunday, May 31, 2020
Diversity Newsletter publication date: 
Sunday, May 31, 2020


from Inside Higher Ed https://ift.tt/2ZYIxyz

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Why Is Middle School So Hard for So Many People?

Middle school. The very memory of it prompts disgust. Here’s a thing no one’s thinking: Geez, I wish I still looked the way I did when I was 12. Middle school is the worst. Tweenhood, which starts around age 9 , is horrifying for a few reasons. For one, the body morphs in weird and scary ways. Certain parts expand faster than others, sometimes so fast that they cause literal growing pains; hair grows in awkward locations, often accompanied by awkward smells. And many kids face new schools and a new set of rules for how to act, both socially and academically. But middle school doesn’t have to be like this. It could be okay. It could be good , even. After all, middle schoolers are “kind of the best people on Earth,” says Mayra Cruz, the principal of Oyster-Adams Bilingual School, a public middle school in Washington, D.C. The notion that middle school deserves its own educational ecosystem at all dates back to the 1960s , with a campaign to better accommodate the specific learning ne...

Debacle over review reveals racism in academy (opinion)

When medievalist Mary Rambaran-Olm wrote about having her book review “torpedoed” for not being “more generous” to the book’s authors, no one could have expected that this would send shock waves across the academic community in what became an online maelstrom revealing the extent of white academic gatekeeping, ally performativity and blatant racism. For those of us who work on decentering whiteness in premodern fields such as classics, medieval/early modern studies, archaeology and in or on the Global South, this latest attack targeting a scholar of color exposed what many of us have been trying to draw attention to for years—that racism is deep and pernicious in the so-called liberal and woke academy. Rambaran-Olm was commissioned to review The Bright Ages: A New History of Medieval Europe ( HarperCollins ) for the Los Angeles Review of Books because of her expertise in early English medieval literature and history, and because she is one of the leading scholars challenging the...