Socialization

Opening Our Hearts & Homes To People Of Other Cultures & Ethnic Backgrounds

Authored by: Rita Cook

Over the past four years, Anthony Mastracchio has hosted four exchange students; he says each has taught him about their culture, and in turn, he shares his Italian heritage with them.

Project ChildSafe Could Benefit Black Teens And Other Minorities

Authored by: Rita Cook

Countless children are exposed to a variety of firearms in the home, and these weapons cause a majority of the teen homicides, suicides, and accidental deaths. But black teens, black families and other minorities seem to be affected the most.

Issue Of The Week XIX: The Help: A Harmful Fairy Tale

Authored by: Judith H. Katz Ed.D. Kaleel Jamison Consulting Group Inc.

The Help has certainly garnered its share of attention and awards. Many critics, including some highly respected reviewers, have unreservedly praised the film. The performances of Viola Davis and others mesmerized many moviegoers and are indeed outstanding. Some people have complained about the trite and oversimplified plot — that it is more fairy tale than history — but these comments often get lost among the raves and award mentions.

Conversation Of The Week XIX: Understanding The White Supremacist Consciousness And Identity

Authored by: Abby L. Ferber Ph.D. Professor of Sociology

Each week, the White Privilege Conference and the Matrix Center for the Advancement of Social Equity and Inclusion, housed at the University of Colorado, Colorado Springs (UCCS), hosts a half hour radio show called Intersections Radio that features an interview with a different author, scholar, and/or speaker.

Who Said We Do Not Need To Have A Dialogue About Race And Racism In This Country?

Authored by: Janice S. Ellis Ph.D.

What will it take for race, racism, and race relations to become as much a part of the issues to discuss as healthcare, housing, and employment?


One can hardly consider themselves current with anything going on in this country, or their own communities, if they are unaware or oblivious to the incidents that occur all too often that are at a minimum insensitive, a show of ignorance, lack of concern, or downright racist or bigoted.


I can hardly consult any news outlet today, without confronting several reports of some racist or race-related incident.

Welcome! The 2nd Semester Of The National Collegiate Dialogue On Race Relations (NCDRR) Begins

Authored by: Janice S. Ellis Ph.D.

We begin our second semester of the National Collegiate Dialogue on Race Relations (NCDRR) in the midst of the 2012 Presidential Election campaign. What an exciting time it is to be a citizen of the United States of America! And, if you are of voting age, what a great time to vote, become an active participant in the political process. Voting for someone to represent your interests and those of your family and community is one of the greatest actions this great Republic affords us as citizens.

Government Is Big Business: What Has Been Your Experience Lately?

Authored by: Janice S. Ellis Ph.D.

With the 2012 Presidential Election in full campaign mode, the central theme among candidates is jobs, and what and how the next president should get more Americans back to work — what should be done to get the economy healthy again.


What about the perennial issue of how government functions, period?

Being Neighborly Begins At Home

Authored by: Francesca Biller-Safran

Last week, my daughter looked at me with her wide innocent eyes and asked, "Mommy, what does it mean to be neighborly?"


After careful consideration, I said, "It means to look out for your neighbors and the people around you." She replied, "Well, isn't that the most obvious thing in the world? They are our neighbors after all."


I explained that being neighborly extends beyond just the people who live near her, and involves being empathetic to anyone she may come across.

Orientalism With All Its Meaning: Islam, Buddhism, Christianity & More

Authored by: Diane Reynolds

In The Mystery of the Ivory Charm, fictional sleuth Nancy Drew encounters an “oily” and “cumbersomely turbaned” Hindu named Rai. Rai, a circus performer, comes from India “the land of mystery,” and practices a faith described as “very superstitious, a cult, and not normal.” In this action-packed mystery, Nancy Drew, representing Western “rationality,” rescues the young maharajah Rai has helped kidnap and recovers a treasure of valuable jewels.

Will You Accept The Baton In The Race To Achieve Equality?

Authored by: Janice S. Ellis Ph.D.

As we pause to celebrate the birthday of Martin Luther King, Jr., a dedicated and determined fighter — and undoubtedly the most well known — in the fight for racial equality, one thing should be abundantly clear: That through it all, African-Americans, along with their fellow-Americans, have much to celebrate. The intellectual capital, blood, sweat, toil, tears, and ultimately his life helped to make America what it is today.