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African-American
Tulane Law Review Gets First Black Editor-in-Chief
Tulane Law School student Antonio Milton has become the first Black editor-in-chief of the Tulane Law Review. The student-run publication is one of the most renowned legal journals in the U.S. Milton, who is interested in commercial and civil litigation, is part of Tulane’s 3+3 program, which allows undergraduate students to start law school in […]
February 8, 2021
Press Releases
Eloy Ortiz Oakley to receive the 2021
Diverse Champions Award
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: Ralph Newell Phone: 703.385.2419 Email: ralph@DiverseEducation.com FAIRFAX, VA.— Diverse: Issues In Higher Education is pleased to announce that Eloy Ortiz Oakley will be the recipient of the 2021 Diverse Champions Award. Chancellor Eloy Ortiz Oakley embodies the impact that California Community Colleges are having in transforming lives. He grew up in […]
February 8, 2021
Other News
CVS Launches New Scholarship Program with UNCF
Through a partnership with the United Negro College Fund (UNCF), the CVS Health Foundation has launched a $5 million scholarship program. Read More
February 8, 2021
Other News
$5M Federal Grant to Help Community Colleges Address Local Health Care Needs
Muskegon Community College will partner with four other community colleges in the state as part of a $5 million federal grant to meet regional health care demands for a skilled workforce. Read More
February 8, 2021
Other News
University of Holy Cross Nursing Program Offers Hands-On Experience and Nurturing Environment for Future Health Care Leaders
During the past year, more people than ever have been inspired to help others by pursuing a career in health care. For those interested in becoming nurses, the University of Holy Cross offers a fully-accredited and rigorous curriculum that is also designed to help them grow as individuals. “We are interested in the student’s mind […]
February 8, 2021
Other News
COVID-19 Creates Framework for Permanent Campus Culture That Supports Mental Health
“The pain that made you the odd one out is the song that connects you to the world.” That poem — “Eleven,” by Tanya Markul — provides a potent image of the story of mental health during the COVID-19 pandemic. Students have long struggled with mental health issues on campuses, often in shame and secrecy. […]
February 8, 2021
Other News
Fighting Against Historic Distrust and Misinformation To Save African American Patients
A few hours after receiving the second dose of the COVID-19 vaccine, Dr. Valerie Montgomery Rice, president of Morehouse School of Medicine (MSM), says she was “feeling great.” Rice, who says she has “a history of participating in clinical trials,” received her first dose of the vaccine on December 18 with CNN anchor Sanjay Gupta […]
February 8, 2021
Other News
Tribal Colleges Receive Support to Fight COVID-19
As the COVID-19 pandemic persists, health disparities continue to be revealed and exacerbated. The disproportionate impact is especially prevalent within Native American communities, where the infection rate is 3.5 times higher compared to White populations, according to the Centers for Disease Control (CDC). Read More
February 8, 2021
Other News
Former U.S. Surgeon General Discusses His Quest for Health Equity
A two-year-old David Satcher laid gravely ill with whooping cough and pneumonia. He should have been in a hospital, but he was born in Anniston, Alabama, in 1941. There, like elsewhere across the Deep South, hospitals didn’t admit Black people. It was a pernicious practice of the day that also characterized much of the nation’s […]
February 8, 2021
Home
Why Are Economics Departments Failing to Recruit Black Economists?
As universities grow more diverse, economics departments continue to lag behind, especially when it comes to training and hiring Black economists.
February 8, 2021
Latest News
A GAO Report Prompts Scrutiny of For-profit College Conversions
The trend of for-profit colleges converting to nonprofits has been in the spotlight recently after a January report from the Government Accountability Office (GAO).
February 5, 2021
COVID-19
College Board Changing AP Tests to Accommodate for COVID-19 Pandemic
The College Board will be further changing the Advanced Placement (AP) program to be more flexible, EdSurge reported. Last spring, the College Board redesigned the Advanced Placement (AP) program and exams to account for COVID-19 pandemic restrictions, shortening it and making it open book. Students who attend a school in-person may take the paper-and-pencil AP exam with […]
February 5, 2021
Disabilties
ODU Settles with Justice Department on Discrimination and Retaliation Investigation
The Justice Department has settled with Old Dominion University (ODU) to resolve its investigation into a complaint that the school discriminated and retaliated against a graduate student based on disability and her related request for reasonable modifications of policy, according to Justice Department officials. Findings state that the complainant was punished for requesting acknowledgement of […]
February 5, 2021
Leadership & Policy
Dr. Kathryn A. Morris Named St. Lawrence University’s 19th President
Dr. Kathryn A. Morris, provost and vice president for academic affairs at Butler University, will be St. Lawrence University’s 19th president. At Butler, among other things, she led two presidential commissions on diversity and on sexual assault, helped launch a $250 million campaign, improved the school’s academic technology and established its first staff development program. Morris […]
February 5, 2021
News Roundup
Marquette University Receives $31 Million from Alumni, Money to Go Towards Nursing School
Marquette University has received a $31 million donation from alumni couple Darren and Terry Jackson, Forbes reported. The gift will be used to help the school’s College of Nursing reach its goal of preparing 5,000 nurses over the next decade – the school wants 1,000 of the 5,000 to be ethnically and socially diverse. Beginning […]
February 5, 2021
African-American
Famed Attorney Speaks at UK’s Annual Men of Color Symposium
Encouraging individuals to have other people at the table who do not think like themselves and have different lifestyles were some of the points attorney Ben Crump made as the keynote speaker at the second annual University of Kentucky’s Men of Color Symposium on Friday.
February 5, 2021
COVID-19
COVID-19 Creates Framework for Permanent Campus Culture That Supports Mental Health
Staggering loss of life, lingering effects of illness and treatment, economic instability and suffering, academic and vocational disruptions, political strife and racial disparities have become the accompanying melodies of the COVID-19 chorus.
February 5, 2021
Home
Former U.S. Surgeon General Discusses His Quest for Health Equity
At 79, Dr. David Satcher is one of the nation’s preeminent physicians, a respected civil rights leader and scholar, and a pioneering public health administrator. He is also the author of a new book.
February 5, 2021
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