Expanding Our History- It Can Be a Transformational Experience
February 01, 2010
As Dr. Julianne Malveaux, President of historic Bennett College for Women looks on, President Howard-Vital addresses students, faculty, and guests in Greensboro, NC.
Last week I had the opportunity to address a group of faculty, staff, and students at Bennett College for Women in Greensboro, North Carolina for their Lift Every Voice Speaker Series. The intent of my address was to focus on one or two extraordinary, African-American women of the 20th century to help students put into perspective their roles and responsibilities as women in the 21st century. My overall message was that these 20th century women had “paid for us,” and that it was now our responsibility to pay for the 21st century’s citizens by choosing to lead productive and intentional lives.
I have to admit, I did not much like history when I was in high school or when I was an undergraduate. It seemed to me, at the time, that history, or whatever social science nomenclature it was given, satisfied another course requirement, and that it could be mastered with memorization of key facts and a regurgitation of factors that led to some event. Moreover, when I was studying in the mid 20th century, “history” just was not my story, so it did not hold much interest for me beyond earning the grade to maintain my grade point average. There was a definite disconnect.
After my master’s degree program, however, I rediscovered history through reading biographies. It was probably one of my earliest epiphanies as a young adult when I realized that learning about the lives of others was valuable, inspiring, and essential in helping me define my own future. Now, I admit I read biographies of a range of people who were not really covered in my high school or college classes. Nonetheless, the struggles, life choices, failures, and victories of these people helped me to understand myself, my current reality, and to imagine some future actions for myself within a broader context. I believe it was through reading about their lives that I began to more deeply explore the concept of courage.
Once again, we are headed into what has been termed, “Black History Month.” While there are plenty of stories to go around about persons of African-American descent who have achieved marvelous accomplishments, I believe that the real value of expanding our knowledge about our American history is that an expanded base of stories of courage, resilience, and love will resonate with more Americans and will furnish more examples of problem-solving, compassion, and coming of age in an array of circumstances. The broader the range of American experiences to which we expose our youth, the more likely our youth will be able to identify with the prolific American values of hard work, compassion, honesty, self-sacrifice, and courage that we wish to promote for generations to come.
In my own life, I know that the biographies of Fannie Jackson Coppin, Jane Adams, and Maya Angelou have been extremely inspirational and transformational. I often think about how many youth we might reach by exposing them to a richer array of American experience. Otherwise, we allow our youth to fall victims to an overwhelmingly consumer-driven culture. However, if we help them learn more about, and relate to the lives of amazing Americans, think how transformational it would be!
Michelle Howard-Vital, Ph.D.
President, Cheyney University
Tags: Bennett College for Women , black history
COMMENTS
P R E V I O U S P O S T S
- Building the Global Citizens of the Millennium Generation
- By Supporting Young Men of Color, We Enhance Our Collected Futures
- We See the Flowers
- The Butterfly Effect—Small Interventions Can Change Our World
- Learning Her Stories – Expanding Our Consciousnesses
A R C H I V E
- July 2010
- June 2010
- May 2010
- April 2010
- March 2010
- February 2010
- January 2010
- November 2009
- October 2009
- September 2009
- August 2009
- July 2009
- June 2009
- May 2009
- April 2009
- March 2009
- February 2009
- January 2009
- October 2008
- September 2008
- July 2008
- April 2008
B L O G S B Y T A G
achievement gap, alumni, athletic hall of fame, BBBS, Bennett College for Women, Big Brothers and Big Sisters, Bill Cosby, black history, black males, butterfly effect, Call Me MISTER, City Year, college, college board, commencement, education, education challenges, education crisis, educational enterprise, Gaston Caperton, global citizens, graduating seniors, Haiti, hall of fame, healthcare, homecoming, human rights, James Dumpson, legacy breakfast, Mayor Nutter, Michael Nutter, minority males, NEED, negro educational emergency drive, pathways to excellence, Rose-Anne Auguste, social media, strategic plan, study abroad, Sylvester Pace, thanksgiving, transformation, transition, Vivian Stringer


