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Autore principale: Hamilton, Kendra
Natura: Recurso educativo Open Access
Lingua:en
Pubblicazione: 2009
Soggetti:
Accesso online:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ839461
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author Hamilton, Kendra
author_facet Hamilton, Kendra
Hamilton, Kendra
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents The "Belles" Are Back Hamilton, Kendra College Presidents Black Colleges Womens Education Educational Planning Goal Orientation Educational Development Finance Reform The "Bennett Belle." The words conjure an image that is genteel, old-fashioned--hats and gloves, brown-skinned women in flowing white dresses beaming as they take that final walk to graduation. The Bennett College for Women campus certainly reinforces the image, with its broad, tree-shaded lawns and quadrangle and its historic buildings--fully 15 of the 29 total have National Register status, from the majestic Annie Merner Pfeiffer Chapel to the Carnegie Negro Library facing busy East Washington Street. But the pleasant paradox of Bennett College is the way in which old and new are meeting there in such intriguing ways--in, for example, the poised personage of Mesha White, student government president and campus ambassador. White has all the grace and poise one would expect of a "Belle," but she's also a global citizen, speaking with passion about her semester in Ghana, her interests in business and communications, her hopes of getting into Columbia University's international studies program--or perhaps a job in Washington, D.C.--next year. Bennett President Julianne Malveaux, with the advantage of an edgy commentator's persona, an incisive intellect and a sweeping grasp of national and international perspectives, is in the process of crafting a 21st-century vision for Bennett, a vision that involves "seeing Black women in a context, and teaching our students to see themselves in those terms as well." In addition to Bennett's core areas of education and science, Malveaux has begun laying a foundation for her vision of renewal for the college that includes four academic cornerstones: global studies, communications and media studies, leadership, and entrepreneurship.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ839461
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2009
record_format eric
spellingShingle The "Belles" Are Back
Hamilton, Kendra
College Presidents
Black Colleges
Womens Education
Educational Planning
Goal Orientation
Educational Development
Finance Reform
The "Belles" Are Back Hamilton, Kendra College Presidents Black Colleges Womens Education Educational Planning Goal Orientation Educational Development Finance Reform The "Bennett Belle." The words conjure an image that is genteel, old-fashioned--hats and gloves, brown-skinned women in flowing white dresses beaming as they take that final walk to graduation. The Bennett College for Women campus certainly reinforces the image, with its broad, tree-shaded lawns and quadrangle and its historic buildings--fully 15 of the 29 total have National Register status, from the majestic Annie Merner Pfeiffer Chapel to the Carnegie Negro Library facing busy East Washington Street. But the pleasant paradox of Bennett College is the way in which old and new are meeting there in such intriguing ways--in, for example, the poised personage of Mesha White, student government president and campus ambassador. White has all the grace and poise one would expect of a "Belle," but she's also a global citizen, speaking with passion about her semester in Ghana, her interests in business and communications, her hopes of getting into Columbia University's international studies program--or perhaps a job in Washington, D.C.--next year. Bennett President Julianne Malveaux, with the advantage of an edgy commentator's persona, an incisive intellect and a sweeping grasp of national and international perspectives, is in the process of crafting a 21st-century vision for Bennett, a vision that involves "seeing Black women in a context, and teaching our students to see themselves in those terms as well." In addition to Bennett's core areas of education and science, Malveaux has begun laying a foundation for her vision of renewal for the college that includes four academic cornerstones: global studies, communications and media studies, leadership, and entrepreneurship.
title The "Belles" Are Back
topic College Presidents
Black Colleges
Womens Education
Educational Planning
Goal Orientation
Educational Development
Finance Reform
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ839461