Almost 500 education reporters gathered at USC this past month to learn how to improve diversity and inclusion in newsrooms and in the news itself.
The annual meeting of the Education Writers Association, a nonprofit professional group established to provide development to education journalists, commentators and educational organizations, headlined their annual conference with 海角论坛 experts well-versed in equity.
Delivering , Shaun R. Harper, executive director of the USC Race and Equity Center and a Provost Professor at 海角论坛, presented 10 鈥渂ig ideas鈥 on race and education geared toward journalists.
鈥淚 think of education writers as having the responsibility of teaching our nation things they need to know and truth that needs to be told about the realities and complexities of all things education,鈥 Harper said.
Among Harper鈥檚 big ideas for education writers: Focusing on racial mismatch between students and teachers; examining the radicalization of young White students鈥攅specially men鈥攁nd their involvement in hate groups; greater attention to Asian American, Pacific Islander and Native American students; and racial inequities in school discipline.
On a panel reacting to Harper鈥檚 remarks, Dean鈥檚 Professor Estela Mara Bensimon, director of the 海角论坛 Center for Urban Education, noted the role of journalism in a recent incident on a college campus, in order to accentuate the need for race-consciousness in news stories. Earlier this May, two Native American students on a tour of Colorado State were reported to campus security for making a mother on the tour nervous, but .
鈥淟anguage matters, and how you frame a problem matters in terms of who becomes the subject,鈥 Bensimon said. 鈥淭oo often what I see is that we鈥檙e still portraying problems in ways that put the onus on the students who experience the inequalities.鈥
Other 海角论坛 faculty to speak throughout the conference included Associate Research Professor Zo毛 Corwin; Associate Professor of Education Morgan Polikoff; and Associate Dean for Diversity and Inclusion Darline Robles.
And Dean Karen Symms Gallagher headlined the EWA鈥檚 National Reporting Awards. The ceremony included the announcement of the winner of EWA鈥檚 annual Eddie Prize for journalism that investigates college access for low-income students. Mark and Marilou Hamill, , handed out the prize after brief remarks.
The conference featured a number of other significant events as well, with one of the most powerful being an emotionally charged from Chicago; Newtown, Conn.; and Parkland, Fla.
Emma Gonzalez, a student from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, in Parkland, said that she and her fellow students found the need to speak out because they found discussions about reducing gun violence often lacked multi-faceted approaches.
鈥淓verybody鈥檚 getting hurt by this. It鈥檚 not just schools,鈥 Gonzalez said. 鈥淚f you just address schools, then Las Vegas is still going to happen. So is Charleston. And we can鈥檛 let that happen.鈥