
The COVID-19 pandemic has made a massive impact on education affecting children around the world. What are higher education鈥檚 responsibilities to respond? That was the question University of Massachusetts Chancellor explored at a 海角论坛 lecture on听. He also discussed topics from his new book , which calls for a new approach to education that responds to the overlapping crises of climate change, poverty, forced migrations, war and global pandemic.

As one the world's leading experts on issues related to immigration, refugees and the education of children who are immigrants and refugees, Su谩rez-Orozco has published several books on the subject. 鈥淗e is the immigrant story; he came to the United States at the age of 17,鈥 said 海角论坛 Dean Pedro A. Noguera. 鈥淗e epitomizes the story of many immigrant students today. Because he has lived it, he can speak and write about it in a way that only a few others can.鈥
After immigrating to the United States from Argentina, Su谩rez-Orozco was first admitted to community college, then attended UC Berkeley where he earned his AB, MA and PhD. Prior to becoming chancellor of the University of Massachusetts in 2020, Su谩rez-Orozco served as the dean of UCLA鈥檚 Graduate School of Education and Information Studies for six years.
鈥淐OVID-19 has been a wicked, powerful accelerant feeding the wildfires of human inequality,鈥 Su谩rez-Orozco stated. 鈥淭he global pandemic laid bare for the world to see the deepened inequalities in opportunities to learn that flow in our country, but also really increasingly in most of the high and many of the middle-income countries and many of the low-income countries as well.鈥
Lecture highlights and Su谩rez-Orozco鈥檚 reflections on education鈥檚 role during times of crisis:
- Empower future generations: Su谩rez-Orozco explained that educators should nurture their students to be inclusive, humane, just and sustainable. He stated, 鈥淪chools seek nomothetic knowledge, but need to reflect and reflect upon the cultures, the environments, the socio-economic realities of the communities in which they form an essential part.鈥
- Quality education and fundamental skills: Using literacy as a measurement, he explained that the current quality of education and its foundations are broken. 鈥淎lmost 400 million children don't have literacy, [they] don't have the most fundamental basic literacy skills,鈥 said Su谩rez-Orozco.
- Racialized inequalities continue: The structures of racism and inequality globally are creating a world where schools are unequal and segregated more than any other time. 鈥淭he pandemic essentially intensified these issues,鈥 he stated. Su谩rez-Orozco observed that educational systems are struggling to keep up with the growing population of immigrant and refugee youth of color.
- Climate change education for all: Su谩rez-Orozco stressed the importance of 鈥渃radle to grave climate change literacy.鈥 He felt that educators are falling short when it comes to teaching students about our environment. 鈥淥ur youth are clamoring to learn about climate change, but we鈥檙e failing them,鈥 he said. He encourages educators to nurture, educate and empower students or, as he calls them, 鈥渇uture climate warriors.鈥
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