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Section: Opinion
Opinion
The Role of the Parent-Educator in Strengthening Urban Public Schools
The national debate on urban public education in the United States consistently involves strategies for improving K-12 academic achievement and contributes to our country’s educational performance globally. While strategies to improve academic achievement continue to evolve on the national front, in urban contexts one of the most valuable mechanisms to facilitate this achievement exists within […]
November 5, 2009
Opinion
All Style, No Substance
The Rev. Bernice King has been elected president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. Her election has been the biggest news to break out of the traditional civil rights organizations since the NAACP had a funeral for the N-word. The reality is organizations such as the SCLC, the NAACP and others have marginalized themselves by […]
November 4, 2009
Opinion
Clare’s Couch: Keeping it real mentoring
I was invited to attend a mentoring session for junior faculty. Typically I don’t have time or I find some reason NOT to attend. You know, one more meeting. Although I consider myself a “team player” (depending on the game), I am just not “feeling” those little get-togethers anymore. Now don’t get me wrong, I […]
November 4, 2009
Opinion
Learning When to Flip the Code Switch
When I was a teenager, I struggled to fit in with my peers because I always felt like an outsider in a society defined by a Black-White paradigm. I was uncomfortable in my own skin until I was 20 or 21, when I realized that being an Indian-American who could mix easily with diverse communities […]
November 3, 2009
Opinion
Mismatched or Undermatched?
A few years ago, opponents of affirmative action claimed admitting students of color into institutions that were too challenging for them was setting these students up for failure. This “mismatch” theory explained why students of color were more likely to drop out without completing a degree. However, a new study has raised a more intriguing […]
November 2, 2009
Opinion
Diary of a Mad Black Professor: A Critical Race Therapy Moment
I have been told the first step in getting over a problem is admitting that one has a problem. I made it to the first step because I can admit I am angry. No, heck no, I take that back; I am mad. I know people don’t get mad, only animals get mad. Even my […]
November 1, 2009
Opinion
HBCUs, Student Protest and Lincoln University’s Library
“Every man of humane convictions must decide on the protest that best suits his convictions, but we must all protest.”                                                          —Martin Luther King Jr. A week ago, I attended the History of Education Society annual meeting in Philadelphia. On the program were four or five different papers about HBCUs and their historic traditions of […]
November 1, 2009
Opinion
A People on the Precipice?
The recent news of the savage gang rape of a fifteen year-old girl in Richmond, California broke my heart. Again. I have thought of little else since hearing the gruesome details of the child’s ordeal, as others stood by-watching, cheering, filming, or partaking – for over two and ½ hours. For the second time in […]
October 28, 2009
Opinion
A People on the Precipice?
The recent news of the savage gang rape of a 15-year-old girl in Richmond, Calif., broke my heart. Again. I have thought of little else since hearing the gruesome details of the child’s ordeal, as others stood by-watching, cheering, filming, or partaking – for over two and ½ hours. For the second time in recent […]
October 28, 2009
Opinion
Professor, Academic Adviser, Personal Counselor
One of the biggest challenges I’ve faced since coming to Lincoln has been the added task of advising students. Many large universities have full-time advisers available within departments while others have advisers who stick with a student for the duration of their college careers. Not so at Lincoln, where the professor is also adviser. When […]
October 27, 2009
Opinion
Perfectionism: Just Stop It!
The best piece of advice received in my academic career thus far was given to me by Dr. Wayne Urban, an historian and professor at the University of Alabama. During my first year as a faculty member, I walked into his office and asked, “Wayne, how do you write so much excellent scholarship, how […]
October 26, 2009
Opinion
Cultivating Cultural Curiosity
I took Monday off to celebrate Diwali, the Hindu festival of lights. This was the first time in my teaching career that there wasn’t a campus community that observed Diwali, which has different meanings for followers of Hinduism, Jainism, Sikhism and Buddhism. Diwali is celebrated according to the lunar calendar. It dates to centuries B.C. […]
October 22, 2009
Opinion
The House Rules
Morehouse College has laid down the law. And not a moment too soon… As has been widely reported in many of the major national news outlets, the storied all-male private college, known as “Harvard of the South,” has issued a sweeping dress code for all of its 2,700 students. In case you haven’t seen it, […]
October 20, 2009
Opinion
How about a Career in Fundraising for Students of Color?
Editor’s note: This blog post was co-authored by Nelson Bowman III.  From time to time, I like to write with others and this week my friend Nelson Bowman III, director of development at Prairie View A & M University, had some good ideas — so we decided to write about them together.  Both […]
October 19, 2009
Opinion
Matching Aspirations With Values
In a report released October 7 by the Pew Hispanic Center, nearly 90 percent of Latino young adults said a college education is important for success in life. However, only about 50 percent of respondents said they planned to get a college degree.  What can we take away from the findings of this representative […]
October 15, 2009
Opinion
Raising Tough Questions About Enrollment Diversity
I recently delivered a keynote speech at the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s 2009 Diversity Forum during which I afflicted the comfortable on the question of “excellence vs. diversity” in college and university admissions. At that speech, I encouraged a generally receptive campus community to think broadly about the declining number of Black students enrolling in colleges […]
October 15, 2009
Opinion
Too Much Venom Aimed at Black Men
Last month at the MTV Video Music Awards, Kanye West ambushed the stage and grabbed the microphone from singer Taylor Swift during her acceptance speech for winning Best Female Video. West then launched into a contradictory rant congratulating while disparaging Swift, arguing that Best Female Video nominee Beyonce’s “Single Ladies” was “one of the best […]
October 14, 2009
Opinion
Unlocking the Learning Potential
“I like you but I can’t pass you.” I’ve said something along that line to a number of students over the years and it’s been especially tough for me to say to students I am fond of. One of the things that I’ve had to deal with over the past five years has been separating […]
October 14, 2009
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