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Forum will focus on ways communities
can achieve diversity |
By Kim Cretors
kcretors@uga.edu |
The university will hold a Spring
Diversity Forum on Feb. 28 from 12:30 to 3 p.m. in the Reception
Hall of the Tate Student Center. The forum is free and open to the
public but registration is required
by Feb. 26.
This year’s forum will focus on the ways in which UGA and Athens
Technical College can work with local communities to achieve greater
diversity. The featured session is “Campus–Community Connections”
and will consist of discussions led by representatives of UGA, Athens
Technical College and Project Grad Atlanta.
“As institutions of higher education seek to build a diverse
community of learners and educators, conversations focusing on ‘how
diversity works’ are essential,” says Keith D. Parker,
associate provost for institutional diversity.
Key elements of diversity will be discussed at the forum, as well
as methods and activities to reduce prejudice on college and university
campuses. Experienced diversity professionals will discuss successful
programs, and attendees will be able to participate in those discussions.
Opening remarks will be made by Arnett C. Mace, senior vice president
for academic affairs and provost. Reed Kimbrough, director of diversity
programs and community relations at the Atlanta Journal-Constitution,
will deliver the keynote address.
Two administrators from Athens Tech—Cris Perkins, director of
public relations, and Lenzy Reid, director of admissions—will
discuss programs at their institution. Perkins will outline “Believe,”
a pilot program in its first year involving 10 Coile Middle School
seventh-graders. Each month, as ways to learn about career opportunities,
the students take field trips and have lunch with teachers and students
from an Athens Tech program such as early childhood education or physical
therapy. Additionally, there’s a $16,500 scholarship for each
of the 10 students once they graduate from high school. The scholarships
are funded by the Athens Tech Foundation and future scholarships will
be funded by community and business donations.
Reid will cover the Organized Black Students Encouraging Unity and
Excellence program. OBSEUE encourages academic excellence and unity
through partnerships between the student body, the faculty and staff,
and the community.
The organization provides an array of services to allow for full development
throughout a student’s college career.
Kweku Forstall, executive director, will share information on Project
Grad Atlanta, a -research-based school--community collaborative designed
to achieve whole school reform.
A nonprofit organization, Project Grad Atlanta seeks to improve the
education of low-income, disadvantaged children in inner-city schools
by concentrating on providing all children with a quality education
so that they will enroll in and graduate from college.
Parker will discuss Aspire, a UGA program providing middle school
students with intensive academic enrichment. Aspire was created in
2002 by Tracey Ford of UGA’s African American Cultural Center
and the late Mary Frasier, a nationally recognized professor in gifted
education at UGA.
The program features academic classes in the morning, lunch in a UGA
dining hall and enrichment activities in the afternoon. A community
partnership was formed with the Clarke Youth Association, the Greene
County Mentoring Program and the Athens Housing Authority to fund
and identify students for the program.
Donald McLellan of UGA’s College of Agricultural and Environmental
Sciences will provide information on the Young Scholars Internship
Program, which encourages outstanding high school students to pursue
careers in science.
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