¶¶Òőappâs 12th Academic Festival was also its first virtual one â a format that enabled the College to spread out programming over nearly a weekâs time. In addition to the sessions we feature and link to in our overview story about Academic Festival, this yearâs event included programming that ranged from a discussion of college sports and social justice to snapshots of how the COVID pandemic is playing out in nations around the world. TC also honored a group of distinguished alumni and offered a heartfelt thank you to donors who have stepped up during the pandemic.
Alumni Talk Activism
The inaugural segment of Alumni Voices, a new podcast series featuring TC alumni, explored activism through the prisms of cultural relevance, personal conviction, educational leadership and the 21st-century legacy of a 20th-century sharecropper.
Moderated by Rosella Garcia, Senior Director of Alumni Relations, the seriesâ first installment, titled âA Call to Action,â featured Associate Professor of Educational Leadership Sonya Douglass Horsford; (M.A. â08), the Co-founder and Chief Academic Director of the Uceda School network, which teaches English as a second language; Mariana Casellato, a masterâs student in TCâs International Education Development; and Krystal Hardy Allen, a doctoral student in the Collegeâs K-12 Urban Education Leadership program.
Alumni Voices Podcast | Ep. 1 - A Call to Action
Horsford, the Founding Director of TCâs Black Education Research Collective and Co-Director of the Collegeâs Urban Education Leaders Program, called for confronting âtough truths around racism and the history of the country.â
âThe question becomes, for those who call themselves leaders, âWhat is our responsibility?ââ she said. âWho needs to be thinking about these things on a macro scale?â And what role can each of us play to advance an agenda that is inclusive and creates the types of educational communities that I believe we are capable of creating?â
Uceda (M.A. â08), who created TCâs Uceda Lecture on Womenâs Empowerment, said that the spirit of activism and change has to come from within.
âThere is so much information in this world that itâs easy to lose focus,â she said. âThe first thing I do is to look inward before looking outside to know what justice means to me. There has to be a lifetime commitment.â
Casellato, a Zankel Fellow and masterâs candidate in the International & Comparative Education program, said it was imperative that activists âvalue local perspectivesâ in the development of policies to improve healthcare and education in foreign communities.
Allen spoke movingly of her grandmother, who picked cotton as a child, defiantly sipped water from fountains marked âwhite only,â was struck by a brick while defending her right to vote in Selma, and lived long enough to see a Black man become president of the United States.
âI take a lot of hope from her,â said Allen, a former teacher and principal who leads a New Orleans-based educational consulting firm. âItâs easy to become cynical, itâs easy to become bitter, itâs easy to become hopeless and to believe that some things just arenât possible. But change is happening. Donât lose faith in the efforts we push toward day-to-dayâ
Taking Hollywood to School
Academia and entertainment have much to learn from one another. That was a key takeaway from âIntersecting Identities: Historical Context and the Development of Personal Narrative Identity,â a conversation between TC Associate Professor of English Education Yolanda Sealey-Ruiz and (M.A. â97), award-winning actor, producer and educator.
âStories matter,â said Sealey-Ruiz, author of (Kaleidoscope Vibrations, 2020) â a point Cox illustrated by performing a monologue from âOne Drop of Love,â her one-woman show about her own complex racial identity. Then Cox spoke about her work advising Pearl Street Films, the production company created by stars Matt Damon and Ben Affleck, on inclusiveness and equality.
Intersecting Identities: Historical Context and the Development of Personal Narrative and Identity
âEntertainment work is not very deep,â she said. âBut being back at TC reminds me of how much we marry scholastic work with mainstream representations of ourselves. Academic work can get mired in terminology that is not acceptable to larger audiences. But Hollywood is extremely limited in terms of not paying attention to scholars and this kind of work.â
Making College Sports an Arena for Social Justice
Big-name professional athletes are increasingly outspoken on political and social issues â but some of the most substantive discussions may be occurring on the college level.
Take the NCAAâs Big East Conference, where Commissioner has instituted measures ranging from a partnership of minority menâs assistant basketball coaches to the Black Lives Matter patches that will adorn playersâ uniforms during the 2020-21 basketball season.
TC Talks | Championing Excellence By Embracing A Culture Of DE&I by Val Ackerman
âThis is the power of one,â said Ackerman, who was the founding commissioner of the WNBA, and whose daughter Sally, is a student in TCâs Social-Organizational Psychology program. âWhat can we do when we wake up every day to live a life of respect, tolerance and find ways to lift up others, particularly those who donât have the privileges that we have?â
Self-Expectations During COVID: Setting a Different Bar
Nine months into the COVID pandemic, TC Professor of Clinical Psychology Doug Mennin believes the only certainty may be that thereâs no right answer for âhow to respond to this uncertainty.â
If nothing else, agreed Mennin and psychologist (M.A. â72) in a conversation titled âCoping with Crises: Anxiety & Depression During Covid-19 and Beyond,â that reality argues for being less hard on ourselves.
Coping with Crises: Anxiety & Depression during COVID-19 and Beyond
âThis is a first-time experience for everyone,â said Atkins, the media personality and author known as Dr. Dale, who says sheâs shifted from crisis counseling to advocating for patience and self-forgiveness in grappling with difficult decisions. âWe need to find kindness and empathy for ourselves so that when we try something new and fall on our face, the voice in our head is not a critical, shaming voice, but a voice that says, âHey, youâve never done this before â letâs keep trying.â Itâs what I like to call a personal cheerleader.â
Miracle on 34th Street: Changing the Culture at MSG
Five years ago, arriving at Madison Square Garden Entertainment Corporation as the new Executive Vice President and Chief Administrative Officer, (M.A. â93) found a classic good news-bad news scenario.
The good news, said Kapell in a talk titled âPlan for Your People First,â was an aggressive plan to revolutionize the entertainment industry and world-class assets that included the Garden (home to the Knicks basketball and Rangers hockey teams), Radio City Music Hall, the Beacon Theater and Chicagoâs Chicago Theater. There was also MSGâs storied 141-year history.
The bad news was that, over the past seven years, seven previous heads of human resources had been defeated by a culture that also verged on the historic.
TC Talks | Plan for Your People First by Sandra Kapell
MSG had no compensation program tied to performance. Seasonal turnover in some jobs exceeded 100 percent. The payroll system wasnât automated, leading to frequent mistakes. In a confidential survey, most employees declined to recommend MSG as an employer.
Kapell says her TC policy studies helped her launch a multi-year effort aimed at cultural change: âI learned to think in a real-world way about solving problems.â Today, management seeks out employee feedback. The company has invested heavily in technology. Organizational goals are tied to peopleâs jobs and offer pathways for career advancement. MSG still aims to improve its diversity -- but compared with five years ago, the company is operating in another league: âOur employees have really risen to the occasion.â
A Community Commiserates: Six TC alumni from around the world share local updates on the pandemic
In April, when Rosella Garcia, TCâs Senior Director of Alumni Relations, met on Zoom with alumni from five nations, COVID had infected 780,000 people worldwide, with 37,500 deaths. When the panel reconvened in late September, those numbers stood at 31.7 million and 970,000. They were higher still when the panelâs discussion aired during Academic Festival.
But as described by the panelists, the pandemicâs impact has varied widely.
International Alumni Perspectives on COVID
In China, (M.A. â15), Facility Manager for Western International School of Shanghai (WISS), said life was âlike before COVID,â with people congregating sans masks and schools fully open.
In contrast, Brazil stands as a textbook case of doing âthings you shouldnât do in a pandemic,â said (M.A. â11), Co-Founder and Chief Education Officer at the SĂŁo Paulo-based learning organization Camino Education. The nation has repeatedly changed health and education ministers and failed to articulate a coordinated preventive strategy, Lyle said, and Brazilâs students have been out of school longer than those of any other country.
After a summer of respite in Italy, âthe bell curve went up in Augustâ when people returned from vacations, said Vasily Popov (M.A. â95), who heads Strategic Planning at the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations in Rome. With schools now open, Popov fears the numbers will keep climbing â and Italy has announced plans to seal off six regions.
South Korea, too, is enduring âa second attack,â said (Ed.D. â13), Founding Director of the Center for Education and Technology in Seoul. Things could be even tougher this time: âThe government has given us stronger rules because we canât trace where infections were coming from â and that makes people so scared.â
In San Francisco, where residents have weathered both the pandemic and the surrounding wildfires, schools continue to operate remotely and âa lot of us are just staying home,â reported (M.A. â11), Supervisor at the Bay Area Teacher Training Institute. Brody, who says TC taught her to focus ânot only on what youâre learning but also the learning process,â is trying to help teachers âunderstand what students are going through and how itâs different for them.â
(Ed.D. â11, M.Ed. â98. M.A. â97) praised New Yorker City residents for their safety compliance, citing the cityâs low infection rate. But Putman, Vice President for Academic & Student Affairs at SUNY Downstate Health Sciences University, said the Gothamâs corporate employees have yet to return, hurting other industries.
Acknowledging the grimness of these reports, Lyles found hope in TCâs global community: âI feel nourished. As an administrator in education, this has contributed so much to my practice.â
Honoring TCâs Own
Honored at Academic Festival, TCâs 2020 Distinguished Alumni Award recipients were (Ed.D. â91), Chief Executive Officer of the Womenâs Sports Foundation, psychologist and media personality (M.A. â72), (M.A. â82), former President of New York Cityâs Hostos Community College, and (Ed.D. â95), John and Maria Neag Professor of Urban Education and Professor of Educational Leadership and Law at the University of Connecticutâs Neag School of Education. Early Career Award recipients were K-12 New York City mathematics teacher (Ph.D. â14) and (Ph.D. â11), Education Director of Columbia Universityâs Earth Institute. The Alumni Award for Outstanding Service, honoring contributions to TC, went to pioneering education technology visionary (M.A. â93) and nurse executive and educator Debra Heinrich (M.Ed. â84). [Watch a video about the award recipients.]
Cheers to Donors â and Snapshots of Their Dollars at Work
At Academic Festival 2020, Provost Stephanie J. Rowley thanked members of the Collegeâs John Dewey Circle and Maxine Greene Society and contributors to the TC Annual Fund for providing âan elixir guaranteed to infuse our faculty and students with innovation, enthusiasm and confidence.â
Rowley described how two faculty members supported by donors have responded to the pandemic.
Cheers to You | A Celebration of TC Fund Donors & Student Scholars
Catherine Crowley, Director of TCâs program in Communications Sciences & Disorders, has long brought students to developing nations to conduct speech therapy with children who have had cleft palate surgery. The pandemic scotched this yearâs trip â but teaching remotely, Crowley enabled her students to develop requisite skills and deliver real-time therapy to children in Colombia via Zoom.
Detra Price-Dennis, Associate Professor of Education, created a digital program through which youngsters queried health professionals. With city officials, she co-led a virtual town hall panel on public education. And through the National Council of Teachers of English, she led workshops for teachers worldwide.
Rowley also introduced four TC masterâs degree students supported by the TC Annual Fund.
Analissa Calvin (Elementary Inclusive Education) said TC has introduced her to âwindows and mirrorsâ â the concept that âchildren need to be able to see through into other peopleâs expenses, but also see themselves reflected in their education.â
DJ Jeffries (Adult Learning & Leadership) paid tribute to a grandmother who âworked three jobs so that we could have a chance.â He hopes to improve organizationsâ representation and treatment of marginalized employees.
Julian David-Drori (Neuroscience & Education) shared that he has twin younger brothers with autism spectrum disorder and that he, too, has neurodevelopmental disabilities. He hopes to change education so others with these issues âsucceed rather than just struggle through.â
Mariana Casellato (International Education Development) is interning at Columbia Universityâs Advanced Consortium on Cooperation, Conflict and Complexity, producing podcasts on the intersection of colonialism and COVID.
Echoing her fellow students, Casellato offered thanks for âthe financial aid that gives me the support to be here at the College.â
