Sunday, October 4, 2015

Where is the Love? Being a Black Woman in Higher Education


When I was offered my first position in higher education at a primary white institution I thought I was prepared.  I had twelve years of professional experience, having worked at various governmental and non-profit agencies over the years and with individuals from diverse socio-economic backgrounds.  I had also encountered those who were intimidated by my degrees and compentencies in certain areas, but being young and naïve, I often chalked up those experiences to me being an outcast because I had chosen to go to Tulane University versus the state flagship school, Louisiana State University, where most of my supervisors and peers in the field of social work hailed from.  There was a certain air about attending what was then considered the ivy league of the South, and also some animosity from those who could not afford to go.  I had been told that I thought I was privileged or an elitist, which I also ignored because I knew where I had come from; a lower middle class minority family that lived from pay check to pay check.  I was far from being bourgie or thinking I was better than others. If nothing else, my family made sure I always remained grounded, even with my ivy league of the South degree.  But it wasn’t until I began working in higher education that I started to encounter and experience sexism and racism that took me outside of my immunity, i.e. comfort zone.  After my first encounter with adversity I quickly realized that yes I was very prepared as a professional to educate students, but that I was not prepared for the blatant discrimination that would follow me for the next ten years. 
     Despite the significant roles that women have played in the field of education and how they have struggled for centuries to overcome barriers that were put in place to keep them oppressed, I would soon learn that it would be those who looked just like me in terms of breast, hips and feminine ways that would try to oppress me as well (Essed and Goldberg, 2002). According to Bell Hooks, “black women are more aware of sexist oppression than any other female group in American society has ever been,” and boy was she right!  During my second year at the PWI I had the honor of working with two female students who were experiencing complicated pregnancies.  As there instructor I reached out to both and offered accommodations.  One student was Caucasian while the other was an African-American.  The Caucasian student was allowed to take an incomplete grade and finish her studies that summer while the African-American student was told that she was making up excuses and was deemed as lazy and incompetent.  I was astonished when the same courtesy was not extended to her, even after she was hospitalized and eventually placed on emergency bed rest, all verified with documentation from her physician.  Later that semester she gave birth to a daughter who was born several months premature.  After being hospitalized the institution gave the student of color a failing grade and because I spoke out I was “laid off,” and never invited to return back.  During that moment in time I could have easily identified with the black female suffragists of the 1920’s who became disillusioned with women’s rights (Hooks, 1981).  As a social worker and now an instructor, I felt I was doing my job by supporting both of my students, but it would take me a moment to realize that black women in higher education were sometimes there to be seen but seldom heard.  I was at this particular institution of higher learning to fill a hiring quota, nothing more, nothing less.  My educational background, professional experiences or the ethical guidelines that the profession of social work and its workers were bound by didn’t seem to matter to anyone except me.  
     The silence that was expected of myself and other black women was not a coincidence as I had tried to explain what had transpired, but my next academia position at a for-profit, national technical college proved that the second time around it is truly shame on you.  Taking on a promising position as a research instructor at a technical college I was excited to be working with a group of non-traditional students i.e. construction workers.  If I could guide them in completing a research study this would be a major accomplishment not only for myself, but for the institution as well.  After working with a small group of students for twelve weeks, they presented a completed research study based on the career services department of the institution and I was asked to return for a second term.  But to my dismay, my second installment as an instructor did not go over as well.  The institution experienced a change in administration and the new administration was a by-the-book regime that did not understand that non-traditional students learned through non-traditional methods.  I did not hold my students hands as the institution was requiring.  I instead made them accountable for each other through the distribution of group work.  My method was working until the administration got a wind of what I was doing.  I was reprimanded once, over the telephone, during my off hours.  The white male administrator had no regard to my private time and said so.  Deciding that I would finish out the semester for the sake of my students I made the adjustments and moved forward.  It wasn’t until this same administrator came into my classroom and began to reprimand me in front of my students that I’d had enough.  Agreeing with Peggy McIntosh, I too believe that “whites are carefully taught not to recognize white privilege, as males are taught not to recognize male privilege.  The administrator could not identify with me, and he had no desire too.  Feeling beyond humiliated I quit on the spot and never looked back.
     Now if I didn’t learn anything from those first two experiences I would with my third and fourth.  My confirmation with sexism and reverse racism came when I took an instructor position at an HBCU. During my 2 ½ years at this institution I was ignored by my co-workers and often looked down upon because I did not have a terminal degree.  I was encouraged to return to school, but then given the heaviest teaching load along with a slew of additional responsibilities which made attending school impossible one semester.  Working in an environment where you feel isolated is very stressful and I think the added put downs from other African-American women didn’t help my case.  My students would define me as being cool, but unlike them, I often got the impression that my co-workers felt I was the total opposite when it came to following the rules and working in higher education.  Wiley (2013) states that “cool while difficult to define, is something you can feel, like the real feel of temperature…People who protest too much are hard to consider cool because cool listens…”  My employment in this position came to an immediate halt when I had the audacity to ask to be promoted to an Assistant Professor. This time the sexism and racism came from a multitude of sources, from both males and females who were in leadership positions.  According to McIntosh, “the extent to which men work from a base of unacknowledged privilege is enormous.” This experience would take a toll on my health and end as the most dehumanizing of them all.  I was informed that I was an angry black woman and that if I continued to be difficult that the university would not give me a favorable recommendation if I took employment at another institution.  And if I thought my co-workers and peers were not speaking to me, this turn in events left no doubts in my mind as they began to physically disassociate themselves from me, taking great strides to make sure that our paths did not cross so they would not have to “entertain” me or answer any further questions or better yet, make eye contact with me in the hallways.  After a week of silence; no emails, no phone calls, no meetings to further discuss why I could not be promoted, I decided that my season was over and it was time for me to move on. 
     From sexism to reverse racism, the number of degrees, the amount of success and the level of competency that a black woman has are often disregarded in higher education.  African-American women are expected to simple come to work and do their job; be seen, but not heard and accept whatever is given to her.  As stated best by Audre Lorde, “I was born Black, and a woman."  I am trying to become the strongest person I can become, to live the life I have been given and to help effect change toward a liveable future…I usually find myself part of some group in which the majority defines me as deviant, difficult, inferior or just plain wrong…I have learned that oppression and the intolerance of difference comes in all shapes and sizes and colors and sexualities; and that among those of us who share the goals of liberation and a workable future for our children, there can be no hierarchies of oppression.”                     


References
 

Davis, A. (2002). Education and libeation: Black women’s perspective. In Race critical theories.

Hooks, B. (1981). Black women and feminism. In Ain’t I a woman black women and feminism

Lorde, Audre. There is no hierarchy of oppression.

McIntosh, Peggy. (1990). White privilege Unpacking the invisible knapsack. Independent
     School, 49 (2), 31-35

Wiley J. W. (2013). Of Being Cool. In The Nigger in You Challenging Dysfunctional Language,
      Engaging Leadership Moments pp 87-113.