WMU joins national alliance aimed at developing more inclusive and diverse STEM faculty
KALAMAZOO, Mich.鈥擶estern 九一麻豆制片厂 University is one of 20 universities joining a three-year institutional change effort to develop inclusive faculty recruitment, hiring and retention practices. The Association of Public and Land-grant Universities鈥擜PLU鈥攃o-leads the effort, known as . The new cohort joins an of 15 institutions that began working together to advance such work earlier this year. The National Science Foundation funds the effort as part of its INCLUDES initiative.
Aimed at ensuring all STEM faculty use inclusive teaching practices and that institutions increase the diversity of their STEM professoriate, participating universities begin their work with a self-assessment of current practices and assets. The institutions will then develop and implement campus action plans to drive change and scale such efforts across all their STEM programs.
"We have to give our students role models that represent their interests and backgrounds for them to aspire to be part of these fields going forward," says Dr. Jennifer Bott, provost and vice president for academic affairs at WMU. "We know seeing someone who represents your values, who represents your experiences is incredibly important in motivating you to achieve."
The Aspire Alliance, which APLU and the Center for the Integration of Research, Teaching, and Learning鈥擟IRTL鈥攂ased at the University of Wisconsin-Madison facilitate with the involvement of several universities, is engaging the new cohort of 20 universities through its Institutional Change鈥擨Change鈥擭etwork. The network provides universities with comprehensive support and resources for institutional change, including access to national partners in a concierge-style approach to technical assistance.
鈥淩ecruiting, hiring and retaining more inclusive and diverse STEM faculty on our campuses is essential for the increased success of all STEM students, the increased quality and production of our scientists, and public universities鈥 ability to achieve their mission to improve lives,鈥 said Travis York, APLU鈥檚 assistant vice president, academic and student affairs, who is also co-leader of the IChange Network. 鈥淚ncreasing diversity, equity, and inclusion within a project aimed at catalyzing large-scale innovation and change is extremely difficult 鈥 which is why we鈥檙e thrilled to announce a new cohort of institutions committed to working collaboratively to do exactly that on their campuses.鈥
Diversifying STEM
This is one of two new efforts WMU is involved with focusing on diversifying STEM faculty. The University is also collaborating with three other research institutions to develop strategies to increase the number of female STEM faculty across the country. The work鈥攎ade possible by a three-year, nearly $1 million NSF ADVANCE grant鈥攆ocuses on challenges facing women of color and women with family responsibilities.
鈥淲e are excited to have these 20 impressive universities expand the IChange Network and bring their deep commitment to transforming STEM education,鈥 says Tonya Peeples, associate dean for equity and inclusion of the Penn State College of Engineering and co-leader of the Alliance鈥檚 IChange Network. 鈥淟earning from and alongside our exceptional first cohort, this second cohort will grow our potential to identify and share the most promising innovative practices towards diversifying the STEM professoriate and ensure their teaching, advising, and mentoring is inclusive. All of this will help ensure the success of underrepresented groups in STEM fields.鈥
Despite the centrality of diversity in learning and student success, efforts to increase underrepresented faculty have not been as successful as intended, particularly in STEM. A analysis revealed that underrepresented minority faculty occupied a mere 9% of professorships in STEM fields at four-year institutions. Other research shows when underrepresented students are taught by diverse faculty members they achieve at significantly higher rates; as much as 20 to 50% of the course achievement gaps between minority and majority students are eliminated.
Association of Public and Land-grant Universities
APLU is a research, policy and advocacy organization dedicated to strengthening and advancing the work of public universities in the U.S., Canada and Mexico. With a membership of 241 public research universities, land-grant institutions, state university systems and affiliated organizations, APLU's agenda is built on the three pillars of increasing degree completion and academic success, advancing scientific research, and expanding engagement. Annually, member campuses enroll 4.9 million undergraduates and 1.3 million graduate students, award 1.3 million degrees, employ 1.3 million faculty and staff, and conduct $44.9 billion in university-based research.
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