Historically Black [emerging] HSIs Podcast

What is a Historically Black [emerging] HSI? This episode of ¿Qué pasa, HSIs? with Dr. Gina Ann Garcia breaks it down and delivers the message you didn’t know you needed to hear. We know that HBCUs are unapologetically Black-serving, historically and authentically, but HSIs aren’t. In this episode we talk about what HSIs can learn from HBCUs with a focus on liberatory curriculum and empowerment pedagogies. We also talk about how HBCUs are good servers to Latine students, and especially Afro-Latine students. Importantly, we talk about the complexities of being an HBCU AND an emerging HSI, and whether it is federally possible to be both. The mujeres in this plática are brilliant, empowered, and melanated! (Future) Dra. Stacey Speller is a Nuyorican doctoral student at Howard University (#HBCUOrgullo). Dra. Dwuana Bradley is an assistant professor at the USC Rossier School of Education examining the ways anti-Black sentiment perpetually undergirds the drivers and levers of federal, state, and institutional policies. Dra. Gina English Tillis is an interdisciplinary scholar-practitioner with over a decade of experience shaping educational experiences at various HSIs, HBCUs, and emerging Hispanic-serving HBCUs. Dra. Natalie Muñoz is an AfroLatina assistant professor at Rutgers University Newark's social work department researching AfroLatine identity development, mental health equity, and educational justice. These scholar activists not only teach us about HBCU-eHSIs, but model what true academic hermandad looks like.

Guests: 

Stacey Speller (she/her/ella), Graduate Student, Howard University

Dr. Dwuana Bradley (she/her/we), Assistant Professor, University of Southern California

Dr. Gina Tillis (she/her), Associate Researcher, Center for Research on Educational Policy, University of Memphis

Dr. Natalie Muñoz (She/her/ella), Assistant Professor, Social Work, Rutgers University

Source: https://www.ginaanngarcia.com/podcast/episode/9c88daa9/historically-black-emerging-hsis

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Hispanic-serving HBCUs: towards an anti-colonial meso-relevant theory of organizational identity in sacred spaces of Black education

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USC Rossier researchers awarded $1M grant to advance criminal justice prevention research and practice