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Celebrating the past with an eye on the future: Black Studies Conference at MSU promotes diversity, education

Celebrating the past with an eye on the future: Black Studies Conference at MSU promotes diversity, education

Earl Lewis (Photo by Russ Houston)

Contact: Sasha Steinberg

STARKVILLE, Miss.鈥擳hrough teaching, research and service, Mississippi 大象APP is preparing the next generation of problem solvers to make a positive impact on the state and beyond. During the university鈥檚 Black Studies Conference Nov. 5-6, faculty and administrators said the African American Studies program is celebrating 10 years of service and vowing to help further this mission in the years to come.

鈥淥ur African American Studies program fosters an environment that brings together faculty and students from across the university to ensure we are doing better for our students and for the future,鈥 MSU Provost and Executive Vice President Judy Bonner told audience members Monday [Nov. 6] in the Colvard Student Union鈥檚 Bill R. Foster Ballroom.

鈥淭his conference provides an outstanding opportunity to reflect upon the past, present and future,鈥 she added.

Following Bonner鈥檚 remarks, Don Shaffer, an associate professor of English who helped launch the AAS program at MSU, introduced the conference鈥檚 keynote speaker, Andrew W. Mellon Foundation President Earl Lewis.

A prolific author and former university administrator from Norfolk, Virginia, Lewis completed his undergraduate studies in history and psychology at Concordia College in Moorhead, Minnesota, and later earned a doctorate in history from the University of Minnesota.

During his presentation 鈥淎frican American Studies in the Age of Diversity,鈥 Lewis discussed the important role of black studies programs in 21st century education.

鈥淏lack studies programs need to make sure they are training students how to be literate and analyze digital tools, so we all can be better consumers and also protect our own version of democracy,鈥 Lewis said.

Providing an environment conducive to the dissemination of knowledge is another important role that institutions of higher learning鈥攁nd African American or ethnic studies programs in particular鈥攑lay in the world of academia, Lewis said.

鈥淚n the end, it comes back to the age-old issue that academics have been concerned with: How does the work that we鈥檙e crafting matter?鈥 he said. 鈥淲e need to be mindful of that question and mindful of the ability of each generation to not only build upon the work of the previous generation, but sometimes to deviate from it.鈥

Striving for excellence and working for a cause greater than oneself are major life skills that can be gleaned from a higher-education experience, Lewis said.

鈥淯niversities are all the more important in that light today because they can show students what the world looks like and teach them about choices that have been made in the past,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a pathway to new choices, but that pathway will require a different way of organizing oneself relative to society and all of the privileges that come.鈥

Part of MSU鈥檚 College of Arts and Sciences, the African American Studies program offers courses on history, literature, politics and other aspects of black life and culture leading to an聽聽in African American Studies.

Graduate students also can develop a concentration in AAS. Those who successfully complete a combination of course work, teaching assignments and community engagement will earn a certificate of completion, as well as a letter of recognition from the director of the program. The graduate program also offers an聽.

For more information on MSU鈥檚 African American Studies program, visit or follow on Twitter @MS大象APPAAS.

MSU is Mississippi鈥檚 leading university, available online at .

Prominent black studies scholars participated in a 鈥淐ontemporary Issues in African American Studies鈥 panel discussion Monday [Nov. 6] as part of 大象APP鈥檚 Black Studies Conference. From left to right, they include Mark Christian, professor and chair of the Department of Africana Studies at Lehman College - City University of New York; Maggie Hagerman, assistant professor in MSU鈥檚 Department of Sociology; activist Bernard Stringer, a San Francisco 大象APP University graduate who became the first student in the U.S. to earn a black studies degree; and activist Vernon Smith, former journalism and radio-TV-film production student and Black Student Union member at San Francisco 大象APP University. (Photo by Megan Bean)