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Subject: "Things done changed. It's going down at your alma mater RIGHT TODAY " Previous topic | Next topic
PimpTrickGangstaClik
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Thu Nov-12-15 07:36 PM

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29. "Things done changed. It's going down at your alma mater RIGHT TODAY "
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http://www.richmond.com/news/local/city-of-richmond/article_4a05d70e-99fe-539f-9097-8415205caafd.html

Black students take over VCU's president's office to demand changes

A group of black Virginia Commonwealth University student activists marched into the school president’s office Thursday morning to demand the university increase the number of black professors and offer more cultural training on campus.
The students, about 30 in all, took over the first floor of the office on Franklin Street about 10 a.m., blocking the entrance and offices on the first floor as well as disrupting daily work.
What followed was not a protest rife with tension or safety concerns but an open and frank conversation with VCU President Michael Rao about the problems the black students they say confront at VCU.

“I’m really glad you’re here. I think it’s important for there to be some sense that our students see a lot of what’s going on, that our students acknowledge it and are willing to talk about it,” Rao said.

The students' main concern is a lack of black professors at VCU. They say they deal with educators who don’t understand their cultural concerns or the experiences driving their thoughts and world view.

VCU says 5 percent of its professors are black. That’s equal to the national average, according to The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education.
In addition to concerns about what’s happening inside classrooms, the students said they feel like outsiders on campus. VCU’s student body is 15 percent black.

“You can go a whole four years talking to white people, being taught by white people and not having anything to do with black people,” sophomore Reyna Smith said.
The students, several of whom were scheduled to meet with Rao at 11 a.m., entered the building Thursday morning after marching across campus and up Franklin Street chanting “No justice, no peace.”

Once inside the office, they read from a prepared letter expressing their solidarity with student protesters at the main campus of the University of Missouri and from a list of changes they are demanding from VCU officials.

Staff members allowed the students to peacefully read their letter and demands. Brian Shaw, senior executive director in Rao's office, then took the list of the demands and offered the students a chance to meet with Rao an hour early.

The students, sitting down and occupying most of the first floor, declined to leave or to reschedule the appointment.
Rao came downstairs a few minutes later and talked with the students for more than two hours.

The efforts of Rao, his staff and the students themselves defused what easily could have become a nasty standoff.
The students told Rao about feeling alienated at a place where they turned to improve their future. Several said they were angry, hurt and feel abandoned by the university.

Rao sympathized and encouraged them to talk about their concerns.
He told them that their issues are not a complete surprise and that VCU is taking steps to bring more black professors into the university. The university hired eight black professors between last school year and this school year.

Still, he said, it must be acknowledged that black students have a unique perspective and that the university needs to work to bring about fundamental change.
“Students of color can’t take on the burden themselves,” Rao said. He added later, “I very much have the same vision for VCU. I think there’s greater capacity to do what we know we need to do for all fellow human beings, and it needs to be a model for the rest of the nation.”

Among the students’ demands are for VCU to double the number of black faculty members to 10 percent of the total number of professors by 2017, to have at least one of every three candidates interviewing for a faculty position be black, and to create a position to make sure the policies are being implemented.

The students also demand the creation of a cultural competency course for all students and the hiring of an ombudsman so students have someone who will relate to their experiences and concerns.
The students also want to see an increase in funding for cultural organizations and events on campus.

Shayla Sanders, a senior at VCU who took part Thursday, said the issues the students are confronting aren’t simply about themselves. She said having more black professors would benefit all students because of the point of view those professors will bring.

Sanders, and other students, said the idea is to give everyone an opportunity to learn and experience things outside of their cultural comfort zones.
“You really don’t learn about black people at VCU,” she said. “That’s why I think we should go out of our way … to have a transformational experience and have these conversations.”
Thursday’s takeover of the president’s office is the second time black students have rallied this week. About 200 gathered at the university Wednesday.

The demonstrations at VCU follow student-led protests at the University of Missouri, which led to the abrupt resignation Monday of the university’s president, Tim Wolfe, over his administration’s handling of racial complaints.

“As black students at a (predominantly white university) located in the capital of what was once the Confederacy, what the black students at Mizzou are currently experiencing could someday be VCU if further progressive action is not taken,” Attalah Shabazz said, reading from the letter.

Rao, in an email to students and faculty members following Wednesday’s rally, said the university took the concerns seriously and would hold a forum on diversity and inclusion next week.
On Thursday, he invited the students sitting in his office to play a role in the forum and said his staff would work to get them excused from class.

The two sides also agreed to meet again, including gathering in February to discuss progress on the students’ demands.
“I have very little doubt at all about many of the things that people are talking about because sometimes you feel it," Rao said. "Sometimes, to be honest, you wonder, 'Where are the students?' ”

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Graduates of PWI universities, did you ever feel oppressed? [View all] , PimpTrickGangstaClik, Wed Nov-11-15 08:03 PM
 
Subject Author Message Date ID
10% or so...not oppressed but diff treatment
Nov 11th 2015
1
nope.
Nov 11th 2015
2
hell no... but VCU was 49% white
Nov 11th 2015
3
      I saw this on my FB feed...
Nov 13th 2015
33
           i should add...
Nov 13th 2015
35
                Easier said than done (re: more black faculty)
Nov 13th 2015
46
                     if you need a $1.. don't ask for $2, ask for $10
Nov 13th 2015
54
                     What's the jump from high school teacher to college professor?
Nov 16th 2015
74
I wouldn't say oppressed, but
Nov 11th 2015
4
No but i also went to a PWI who focused on minority retention
Nov 11th 2015
5
I went to Temple, although that was a pretty Diverse campus
Nov 12th 2015
6
My wife went to Temple grad, had a latina professor who implied Blacks w...
Nov 12th 2015
10
Blacks w...? Don't leave us hanging here!
Nov 12th 2015
19
      were lazy
Nov 12th 2015
20
yea not sure this would apply to an urban campus
Nov 12th 2015
15
same. there were eye rolling moments here and there, but nothing oppress...
Nov 14th 2015
64
Yes -- but I was affected moreso by homophobia and misogyny
Nov 12th 2015
7
hmm.. i found unc pretty queer friendly
Nov 13th 2015
34
      I should clarify. The school itself wasn't homophobic.
Nov 16th 2015
77
never
Nov 12th 2015
8
Attending one now. I'm good.
Nov 12th 2015
9
FSU and GSU
Nov 12th 2015
11
no
Nov 12th 2015
12
No more so than Iife in general. That's what bothers me about these cur...
Nov 12th 2015
13
Not at all.
Nov 12th 2015
14
Some students are way more sensitive these days.
Nov 12th 2015
16
Not oppressed, but definitely more aware of my blackness
Nov 12th 2015
17
^^^basically this for me
Nov 13th 2015
49
      U street has a Warby Parker now.
Nov 16th 2015
76
Nah, but I grew up in the hood around mostly Black folks
Nov 12th 2015
18
I went to SMU from 2003-2007, and yeah racist ish happened.
Nov 12th 2015
21
Oppressed, no Segregated, Hell Yes
Nov 12th 2015
22
Hell yeah.
Nov 12th 2015
23
nope.
Nov 12th 2015
24
Creating those special admin positions is always hilarious to me
Nov 12th 2015
25
right?
Nov 12th 2015
27
Didn't know we were counting campus police too. In that case...
Nov 12th 2015
26
i'm glad i went to St. John's...it was the best of all worlds
Nov 12th 2015
28
One thing I like about my American History class is that...
Nov 13th 2015
30
Attended two...Temple and Penn
Nov 13th 2015
31
Went to both HBCU & a PWI
Nov 13th 2015
32
A&T is missing from your Top 5 man...
Nov 13th 2015
37
every person i know who went to an HBCU and grduated had no problem
Nov 13th 2015
40
same here and i have a story about it...
Nov 13th 2015
51
      RE: same here and i have a story about it...
Nov 14th 2015
63
No generalizations, numbers don't lie US News & World Report
Nov 15th 2015
67
      RE: No generalizations, numbers don't lie US News & World Re...
Nov 15th 2015
69
This is a really offensive and incorrect statement
Nov 13th 2015
47
      ^^^this
Nov 13th 2015
50
      Why are you offended?
Nov 15th 2015
68
           RE: Why are you offended?
Nov 15th 2015
70
                basically... dude acting like PWI's produce Steve Jobs and Bill Gates
Nov 16th 2015
72
oppressed? no. treated unfairly? yes
Nov 13th 2015
36
it also helped to be in NYC
Nov 13th 2015
43
If you feel segregated then why not transfer to another school?
Nov 13th 2015
38
b/c maybe the school offered benefits that outweighed the
Nov 13th 2015
39
^^^
Nov 13th 2015
42
money? parents? fear? ionno
Nov 13th 2015
41
i mean ulitmately you're there for an education
Nov 13th 2015
52
in state tuition is cheap
Nov 13th 2015
58
Transferring isn't cheap or easy.
Nov 16th 2015
73
I would think college campuses are the least oppressive places
Nov 13th 2015
44
SEC territory and Big 12 territory? DEFINITELY
Nov 13th 2015
48
In the south? Yeah it is...
Nov 13th 2015
53
      I went to U of Tennessee my first year of college
Nov 13th 2015
55
           Yeah but the world is filled with racist assholes.
Nov 13th 2015
59
                Well U of Tennessee is in Knoxville... not sure how oppressive that city...
Nov 13th 2015
61
said by Masta Ace..
Nov 13th 2015
45
Definitely, I was more jarred by racist/sexist administrators & profs th...
Nov 13th 2015
56
in post grad, yes
Nov 13th 2015
57
penn state, had sit ins/week long camp at the student union bldg
Nov 13th 2015
60
I didn't graduate, but I went to Mizzou
Nov 14th 2015
62
i turned down a full-ride @ Mizzou in the mid-90s
Nov 15th 2015
65
Not Oppressed, but in Grad School many black folks felt overlooked.
Nov 15th 2015
66
My school was 85% hispanic
Nov 16th 2015
71
i aint even know what a PWI was until last year.
Nov 16th 2015
75

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