Amherst Astronomy faculty member Kate Follette has canceled the usual meetings and work with her ten students for Wednesday, and instead worked with members of her group to put together this plan to help her group discuss anti-Black racism in our country and in academia and STEM specifically. She has generously shared the document, which includes a variety of resources for us in STEM to advance our anti-racist education, with all STEM faculty supervising summer researchers at Amherst College, and has made it completely accessible to anyone. Her plan includes an exercise drawn from this workshop on Race-Privilege from the Bonner Curriculum.
For Amherst-specific resources from Being Human in STEM students, excerpts from the statements from the STEM departments after the 2015 Amherst Uprising sit-in are available here, the results of interviews with >40 students about their Amherst STEM experiences in 2016 here, collections of ~40 annotated readings on STEM and diversity here, and case study #3 in the link here is a STEM-specific scenario. One of this spring’s HSTEM projects was developing a workshop series centered around experiences in STEM at Amherst and what the students learned in HSTEM that they felt could be addressed to enhance inclusion in STEM. Although we haven’t yet updated www.beinghumaninstem.com with the materials from this spring’s HSTEM class, here is the draft of their HSTEM workshop proposal, and the collection of HSTEM student work as a Zine.
We encourage everyone to join the Follette lab, HSTEM students, staff and faculty, and STEM community members everyone in committing to take Wednesday, June 10th to consider how we will change ourselves as individuals, our departments, our disciplines, and our countries to fight racism every single day.