Students, prospective students and professors are in a circle winding around the wall of a large classroom on the USC campus.
Everyone can see everyone; this is an opportunity for openness, and Angelica, a prospective PhD student and a Latina, is baring her soul.
She tells the story of introducing herself to a White man on her campus, who pronounced her name with a soft g.
鈥淚t鈥檚 An-hel-ee-ca,鈥 she recalled saying.
The man responded: 鈥淚鈥檒l try to learn that, but 鈥 I鈥檓 just going to call you Angie.鈥
Angelica鈥檚 anecdote is one of many given out today representing how students of color are frequently marginalized鈥攊n little ways and big鈥攐n college and university campuses.
And that common experience is why more than three-dozen students have come to 海角论坛 on this Saturday, to hear each other, to find inspiration, to gain knowledge and to build a community.
The organizers of this event鈥攆ormally, the PhD Preparation Summit鈥攅xpected these kinds of stories. Aireale Rodgers and Ashley Stewart, both Black women enrolled in the PhD in Urban Education program at 海角论坛, say that applying to any PhD program can be filled with unexpected landmines, especially for scholars of color.
鈥淲e know the many hoops that folks of color have to jump through in the graduate admissions process,鈥 Rodgers said. 鈥淎nd we know these systems were never created with us in mind. There is a hidden curriculum that routinely disadvantages and demoralizes folks of color.鈥
Underrepresented
According to the National Center for Education Statistics, the than any other except health and law. Yet NCES data also show that students of color make up less than a third of graduates, and faculty of color are .
That disparity is about more than just pure numbers鈥攊t also reflects from faculty of color both in understanding the application process and after joining the academy.
Last spring, Stewart started a spreadsheet tracking pipeline programs that help bridge undergraduate and graduate degree programs for historically marginalized groups.
鈥淚 realized that many of these programs weren鈥檛 being advertised well,鈥 Stewart said. 鈥淲ebsites were inaccessible and many students were likely graduating without knowledge that these programs even existed.鈥
Stewart found Rodgers, who was mulling how master鈥檚 students could be better prepared to apply to doctoral programs. Together they decided to create a new space, where students of color could get resources to navigate the 鈥渉idden curriculum鈥 of the graduate admissions process, but also be reminded of their inherent worth and wholeness.
A new road to mentorship
The problems that disproportionately hit students of color are well documented: Lack of guidance or encouragement ; lack of help ; , or even knowledge about what kinds of grants and funding are available.
The summit is designed to fill those needs. Rodgers and Stewart recruited faculty of color and fellow PhD students to share personal experiences of navigating doctoral programs and to serve as role models of success in the academy.
Attendees hear about the differences between various kinds of doctoral programs, and do focused table discussions on subjects ranging from approaching the GRE to maintaining work/life balance. The organizers also invited Daisy Camacho-Thompson, an assistant professor in psychology at California State University Los Angeles, to moderate the in-the-round discussion where Angelica and others shared their stories.
Rodgers and Stewart want this effort to continue every year, and to be, in Rodgers鈥 words, 鈥渁 sustainable mechanism for community building, critical engagement and enacted commitment to justice in graduate education.鈥 They ; they鈥檙e surveying attendees to improve how the program can run in future years; and they鈥檙e following up with each attendee throughout their respective application processes. In addition, they also secured a promise from the to waive the application fee for summit attendees.
And there鈥檚 no doubt that the connections fostered here will be one of the biggest successes. At lunch and between sessions, attendees approach faculty for advice and support, exchanging information in order to stay in touch. There鈥檚 a promise of mentorship, a sense of community permeating the room.
The summit doesn鈥檛 mean finding or fitting into a PhD program will be easy, but attendees are leaving with new supports that will hopefully make the path easier.
Camacho-Thompson puts it best.
鈥淵ou will learn how to be your true self,鈥 she said. 鈥淵ou will figure it out.鈥