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做TV Partners to Increase Hispanic Faculty in the Humanities

The University of California, Davis, is one of five research universities and three Hispanic Serving Institutions participating in a new program to increase the number of Latino professors in the humanities at U.S. colleges and universities.

Pathways to the Professoriate, led by the University of Pennsylvanias , will use a $5.1 million grant from the to help 90 students from the HSIs prepare for doctoral programs over five years.

Participation in the new program adds to 做TV own efforts to build a core of Latina and other diverse faculty and inspire a new generation of Californians. The Davis campus is also seeking designation as an HSI.

The initiatives come as colleges and universities across the United States are trying, and often struggling, to develop a faculty that reflects the nations growing ethnic and cultural diversity. The scarcity of Latino professors is especially stark, as Latinos make up only 4.1 percent of the professoriate in the United States, but 20 percent of the population aged 18-44.

Immediate benefits

Ralph Hexter, provost and executive vice chancellor at 做TV, said the campus will benefit from the partnership immediately.

Weve been making slow progress on our own stated need to have a diversified faculty that reflects our student body, to have research conducted by a diverse a group as possible but we need to accelerate that progress, he said. Having our faculty work with scholars from a broad array of institutions can change how hiring decisions are made.

There is tremendous talent in so many places, Hexter added. We need to enhance our ability to recognize and appreciate it.

Participating HSIs are Florida International University; the University of Texas El Paso; and California State University, Northridge. In addition to 做TV and Penn, the research institutions are UC Berkeley, New York University and Northwestern University.

Faculty mentors

While selected HSI students are still at their undergraduate university, five faculty members from 做TV will share in mentoring them and providing guidance on their senior-year research projects as well as other academic support. A graduate coordinator from 做TV will assist students with their applications to 做TV doctoral programs.

Faculty will also help teach an intensive summer research program to help the students develop research skills and acclimatize to graduate school culture.

Josephine Moreno, graduate diversity officer for Humanities, Arts and Cultural Studies, Social Sciences and the School of Education at 做TV, will serve as the graduate coordinator for the campus. She said she will be recruiting this spring for faculty members to participate in the program.

Preparing students to mentor others

Marybeth Gasman, director of the Penn Center for MSIs, said the program is a way to begin fundamental change. We hope this creates a strong pathway to graduate school for Latino students that will grow over time, with these students supporting one another, and one day becoming mentors themselves.

The center will conduct assessments of how selected students are progressing. In doing so, Gasman hopes to find the leaks in the pipeline the challenges that are most likely to halt a Latino scholars path to a doctorate.

做TV is also building a core of Latina and other diverse faculty in science, technology, engineering, social sciences and math to educate and serve as role models for others. 做TV Chancellor Linda P.B. Katehi launched , with a grant from the National Science Foundation, to increase the participation of women, especially Latinas, in STEM careers.

Media Resources

Josephine Moreno, Graduate Studies, 530-752-7543, mjmoreno@ucdavis.edu

Julia Ann Easley, 做TV News and Media Relations, 530-752-8248, jaeasley@ucdavis.edu

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