Higher education has been forced to reckon with two compounding crises this year: the Covid-19 pandemic and racism in America. Both have caused tremendous pain, trauma and loss for many within the higher education community and beyond, and obliged us to confront the systemic inequities that have plagued our most highly regarded educational institutions since their founding. Unfortunately, neither crisis has an end in sight.
Until very recently, many of us have enjoyed the privilege of turning?a blind eye to the long and dark history of racism in American higher education. In recent weeks, however, as black students and their allies demanded that campus buildings and other monuments to participants in racial violence be renamed or removed, the lived experiences of institutional racism have been elevated. We can no longer look away from the violence and oppression that have denied black students their fair share of the benefits of higher education for much of this country¡¯s history.
Many of America¡¯s oldest and most illustrious colleges and universities financially benefitted from slavery, either via the slave trade or the forced labour economy it supplied ¨C in some cases, both. During the time of slavery, nearly all colleges and universities¡¯ curricula promoted the inferiority of black Americans, and sanctioned unethical research on enslaved Africans.
After?the Civil War and emancipation of enslaved people, new systems of state-sanctioned anti-black racism, known as Jim Crow laws, ensured that segregation was quickly implemented to perpetuate existing barriers that excluded black students from attending most colleges and universities.
ÁñÁ«ÊÓƵ
The legacy of centuries of racism within higher education is still evident today. Brookings reports that black students make up just 4 per cent of undergraduate enrollees in the nation¡¯s top tier four-year colleges. By contrast, 26 per cent of students in the bottom tier of colleges are black. In addition, graduation rates for black students are reported to be 24 points lower than white students and 20 points lower than students overall.
Aa a sector,?US higher education must make 2020 the year that it not only confronted a historic pandemic, but? the year it confronted the racism permeating its policies, practices and campuses.
ÁñÁ«ÊÓƵ
At this point in time, history is calling on us to critically evaluate and change the systemic inequities that were built into our teaching and learning practices to reinforce a status quo that has prioritised whiteness. We have an opportunity to dismantle the systems that have created racial disparities in academic success that have, in turn, only served to feed negative and untrue stereotypes regarding the abilities of black and other minority students.
A large body of research indicates that the traditional college classroom experience subjects minority students to a range of discriminatory practices. As we respond to Covid-19 and the radical change it requires in the delivery of higher education, we must do more than just digitise the existing discriminatory experiences of learning. We must find a way to utilise the profound disruption caused by the pandemic to build an equitable system of higher education.
The time is now to redesign the learning experience, with minority students at the centre for the first time in our country¡¯s history. We can reinvent higher education to truly be a vehicle for social justice and social mobility ¨C and technology can serve as an accelerant.
At Every Learner Everywhere, the non-profit organisation where I am director, we imagine an anti-racist future that no longer perpetuates the grave inequities of our past and present. We envision a future in which high-quality digital learning tools are an integral part of learning environments that provide equal and fair opportunities for every student. To realise this vision, it is imperative that we all commit to interrogate systems of privilege and power and how they influence our learning spaces.
¡°Anti-racism¡±, as defined by the NAC International Perspectives: Women and Global Solidarity, is the active process of identifying and eliminating racism by changing systems, organisational structures, policies and practices and attitudes, so that power is redistributed and shared equitably.
At ELE we do this by engaging in a process of exploration around existing inequities. This interrogation should also be central to the work universities are doing to shift their teaching and learning environments online.
ÁñÁ«ÊÓƵ
1. Elevate past and present inequities, stereotyping and discrimination in traditional classroom settings and how they translate into digital learning environments
2. Understand the economic, structural, and historical roots of inequity in digital learning
ÁñÁ«ÊÓƵ
3. Identify how implicit bias can influence all learning environments even under circumstances where you cannot see students
4. Acknowledge the realities, lived experiences and human consequences of racism, inequity, and discrimination in student learning
We must see anti-racist equity work as both an outcome and a process in the development of digital learning tools and practices. Additionally, we must regularly challenge ourselves to evaluate how we are engaging; who we are listening to; how we are processing; and who we are bringing to the table.
As educators, our rising to this challenge is long overdue. The time is now.
Jessica Rowland Williams is director of .
Jessica will be presenting ¡°¡±?at the REMOTE summit on 14 July.
ÁñÁ«ÊÓƵ
Register to continue
Why register?
- Registration is free and only takes a moment
- Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
- Sign up for our newsletter
Subscribe
Or subscribe for unlimited access to:
- Unlimited access to news, views, insights & reviews
- Digital editions
- Digital access to °Õ±á·¡¡¯²õ university and college rankings analysis
Already registered or a current subscriber? Login