91°”Íűâs first (ARIE) Conference celebrated both the impact of research and the shared goal of shaping a more equitable future.
âThereâs so much research happening todayâand this is the beauty of this conference,â said keynote speaker Gail Christopher, executive director of the National Collaborative for Health Equity and a senior scholar in Masonâs . âWe can do the research to change the narrative to drive new stories, to amplify those new stories, to demystify and refute the fallacies. Research is an important part of getting rid of antiquated beliefs.â
More than 400 people attended the Monday conference either at or virtually. Sharnnia Artis, Masonâs vice president for , marked the event as a milestone for one of Mason President Gregory Washingtonâs signature objectives. Artis, who facilitated the Mason groups that planned the conference, also served as emcee.
Washington launched ARIE within weeks of arriving at Mason in July 2020 to root out any biases in Mason practices and policies with the ambition that Mason would become a national exemplar for inclusive excellence. Mason is the seventh most diverse public university in the countryâand the most diverse public university in Virginiaâ according to U.S. News & World Report.
âThere is a generation coming behind usâ68 million people of the most diverse group of individuals that this country has ever had,â Washington said in opening the afternoon session of the conference. âTheyâre going to inherit the country, and theyâre going to have to know how to deal with an environment thatâs diverse. They need to be prepared to deal with one another.â
Washington later welcomed Northern Virginia Community College President Anne M. Kress and Virginia State University President Makola Abdullah for a presidential panel on advancing anti-racism and inclusive excellence in higher education.
The morning panel focused on conducting research through that lens. It featured three Mason professors and panelists from Harvard and Virginia Commonwealth University.
Charles Chavis, director of Masonâs , noted that he had returned the previous day from a research trip with students to the Maryland Eastern Shore to work with descendants of racial violence. He talked about treating research subjects as collaborators and partners and empowering them to tell their own story.
âI see what we do as service first,â Chavis said. âAnd in that service our research needs and our research focus really is birthed out of the expressed needs of those weâre serving.â
During that morning panel, Jerome Offord Jr., Harvard associate university librarian for anti-racism, said he isnât looking for allies in the cause. Heâs looking for âco-conspirators.â That term caught on in the room came up throughout the day.
âThis is not just a BIPOC issue,â Offord said. âThis is an us issue. I need people who are going to take the risk professionally, personally, academically. People have to be willing to be in the front of the center conversation with me, not in a break room supporting me, not sending me emails saying âgreat job.ââ
On an afternoon panel about translating research into action, Mason professor of and Wendi Manuel-Scott used the Enslaved People of George Mason Memorial as an example. The memorial, dedicated earlier this year, came about after five students set out to learn more about the people George Mason IV enslaved at Gunston Hall.
Manuel-Scott said that early in her teaching career she used to get âblank eyesâ from students when she talked to them about civil rights actions.
âToday, I donât get blank eyes,â she said. âStudents are incredibly engaged and passionate and fearless. That is everything. Donât lose that audacity, donât lose that courageous spirit. Continue to ask those questions. Because the memorial that you see today would not exist if our students hadnât been willing to ask the questions that they asked and challenge us as faculty members to step up.â
Student and faculty researchers across disciplines displayed about 40 posters highlighting research related to anti-racism and inclusive excellence.
Christopher noted that it takes more than passion to eradicate racism. It requires realistic strategy and creativity to assess the challenges, particularly in the age of disinformation.
âItâs a matter of grace and itâs a matter of love and understanding that weâre all on this journey, and weâre each at different places,â Christopher said. âThere are extremes, and some people will stay at their extreme no matter what. But there is a wide swath in the middle, and our job is to mobilize that middle and to do so with great intention.â
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