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Affirmative Action Under Siege: What's at Stake for Our Campuses, Careers & Communities?
Provides the kind of in-depth analysis of affirmative action that can not be found anywhere else. As the debate on affirmative action rages, many of the most important and salient issues are being overlooked. From discussion about the 1996 California initiative referendum vote to U.S. Senator Bob Dole's bill to eliminate affirmative action, we are bombarded by "expert" observers who have no more than a passing or political interest and limited knowledge of the real issues and how they affect you. The program looks at the history of affirmative action from the 1964 Civil Rights Act to its current status. As the threat of elimination of a program that was set up to help alleviate the lasting effects of continual discrimination continues to grow, it is feared that the abolishment of affirmative action will lessen attempts to bring about equality of opportunity for all on our campuses and communities and in our careers.


Panelists: Elaine R. Jones, Director-Counsel, NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund; Patricia Ireland, President, National Organization for Women, Inc.; Everett Winters, President, American Association for Affirmative Action; Michael R. Forrest, Executive Director, National Association of Colleges & Employers; Stephen Balch, Director, National Association of Scholars; Errol Smith, Vice-Chairman, California Civil Rights Initiative; Julianne Malveaux, Moderator


Broadcast Date: 10/95

Original Price: $395

Current Professional Price: $150

Affirmative Action Under Siege: What's at Stake for Our Campuses, Careers & Communities?
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Diversity in Higher Education: Can We Meet the Challenge?
Campuses today are facing the core issue of including while distinguishing different cultures, ethnic groups, races and ages into a sense of collegial community. Diversity In Higher Education: Can We Meet The Challenge? Brings together nationally recognized experts who address the critical issues which determine the success or failure of achieving this often elusive objective. This solution-oriented videoconference provides an open forum for students, faculty, administrators and community members to engage in a constructive dialogue. You'll come away with a keen awareness of what to do, and not to do, to create and ensure a multicultural educational experience for your students, faculty, staff and community.


Panelists: Roger Wilkins, Professor, History & American Culture, George Mason University; Fellow, Institute for Policy Studies; Dr. Na'im Akbar, Psychologist, Educator, Florida State University; Sabrina Evans, Former President, Black Student Movement, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill; Jeffrey Clark, Executive Board Member, American Association of University Students; Dr. Stephen Balch, President/Executive Director, National Association of Scholars, Professor John Jay College (CUNY); Dr. Mary R. Hoover, Professor, Ethnic Studies, San Francisco State University; Attorney Antonio J. Califa, Legislative Counsel, American Civil Liberties Union; Kevin Pritchett, Reporter, Wall Street Journal; Former Editor, Dartmouth Review; Dr. Myrna Adams, Associate Provost, Graduate Studies, State University of New York-Stoney Brook; William A. Donohue, Chairman/Professor Sociology, LaRoche College, Adjunct Scholar, The Heritage Foundation; Jim Vance, Moderator, News Anchor - NBC/WRC-TV


Broadcast Date: 11/91

Original Price: $400

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Diversity in Higher Education: Can We Meet the Challenge?
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Diversity Strategies: For Today's Complex Environment
With unprecedented demographic changes, severe budget woes, a landmark affirmative action case making its way to the Supreme Court and a conservative national political leadership, diversity professionals and advocates are facing daunting challenges. But as veterans in the affirmative action and diversity field can attest, this is not the last time their agenda will be tested. What they know is that there are valuable lessons to be shared as strategies for coping in our current and future environments. We urge you to join them in this nationally distributed videoconference, the most solution-oriented strategy of the year!


Panelists: Dr. Julianne Malveaux, Moderator, Columnist, Black Issues In Higher Education; Dr. Zola Boone, Director, Institute for Diversity and Multicultural Affairs, Bowie State University; Atty. Steven Holeman, Former chairman and CEO, National Black Law Students Assoc.; Atty. Curt Levey, Director, Legal and Public Affairs, Center for Individual Rights; Litigant, University of Michigan affirmative action case; Karen Narasaki, President/Executive Director, National Asian Pacific American Legal Consortium (NAPALC); William Soza, CPA; Philanthropist; Trustee, George Mason University; Atty. Frank H. Wu, Professor of Law, Howard University; Atty. Shirley J. Wilcher, Former Asst. Sec. Of Labor, Office of Federal Contract Compliance; Executive Director, Americans for a Fair Chance


Broadcast Date: 9/2002

Original Price: $395

Current Professional Price: $125




Diversity Strategies: For Today's Complex Environment
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Enhancing Race Relations on Campus: New Challenges & Opportunities
This live, interactive satellite broadcast as joined together an expert panel that discusses positive methods, solutions, programs and strategies to enhance race relations on American college and university Campuses.


Panelists: Dr. William E. Kirwin, President, University of Maryland - College Park; Dr. Julianne Malveaux, Economist/Columnist, TV/Radio Commentator on Economic and Social Political Issues, San Francisco, CA; Dr. John P. Crecine, President, Georgia Institute of Technology; Dr. Ronald Takaki, Professor, Department of Ethnic Studies and Asian American Studies, University of California - Berkeley; Dr. Evelyn Hu-DeHart, Professor of History, Director, Center for Studies of Ethnicity and Race in America (CSERA), University of Colorado - Boulder; Dr. James Anderson, Dean, Undergraduate Studies, North Carolina State University; Julian Bond, Moderator


Broadcast Date: 11/92

Original Price: $400

Current Professional Price: $50

Enhancing Race Relations on Campus: New Challenges & Opportunities
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Race Relations in Higher Education: A Prescription for Progress & Empowerment
A provocative program that provides videoconference viewers with information that can immediately be put to work ensuring a future of access to higher education for minority students and faculty.


As a result of Hopwood, Fordice and other court cases and Proposition 209, race relations in academia have suffered tremendously. As we face the new millennium it becomes imperative that we start strategically planning for the future. Viewing this videoconference is a major proactive step toward empowerment and regaining the momentum needed to ensure better race relations for the future of higher education.


Panelists: Atty. Christopher Edley, Jr., Scholar/Political Strategist, Professor of Law, Harvard University; Atty. Sumi Cho, Scholar/Activist/Organizer, Assistant Professor of Law, DePaul University; Dr. Juan Francisco Lara, Access and Equity Policy Specialist, Director of Center for Educational Partnerships and Assistant Vice Chancellor, Enrollment Services, University of California-Irvine; Dr. Katya Gibel Azoulay, Scholar/Interracial Multiculturalists, Assistant Professor of Anthropology and Chair of the Africa Studies Concentration, Grinnell College; Dr. Stanley Fish, Scholar/Principal Intellectual, Professor of English, Duke University; Dr. Ray Winbush, Scholar/Race Relations Consultant, Benjamin Hooks Professor of Social Justice, and Director of the Race Relations Institute, Fisk University


Broadcast Date: 11/97

Original Price: $395

Current Professional Price: $200

Race Relations in Higher Education: A Prescription for Progress & Empowerment
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We Can Get Along: A Blueprint for Campus Unity
Major Topics: Who is responsible for creating campus unity? Racial congregation and campus segregation: advantages and disadvantages. How student government, campus newspapers, fraternities and sororities, and ethnic student organizations can build a solid team for change. How to engage large numbers of white and non-white students to be involved in diversity efforts. Ethnic observances, such as Black History Month: how to expand the circle of participants. How to succeed in spite of low minority faculty and student numbers. How to identify and prevent problems before they get out of hand; and when necessary, manage the aftermath. Fees and funding for pluralism: standards for commitment. Should multicultural studies programs be a required part of the curriculum? A case study looks at the racial climate of Georgetown University and the University of Pennsylvania. How to build a sense of community on residential and commuter campuses.


Panelists: The Rev. Leo J. O'Donovan, S.J., President of Georgetown University/ Jacqueline Fleming, Professor of Psychology at Barnard College and Author of Blacks in College; Paul Shang, Director, Help for Education & Life Planning Success Center, Colorado State University; Gloria Romero, Visiting Professor of Chicano Studies, Loyola Marymount University (CA); Curtis Polk, Race Relations Counselor, University of Texas-Austin; Julian Bond, Moderator


Broadcast Date: 11/93

Original Price: $395

Current Professional Price: $75

We Can Get Along: A Blueprint for Campus Unity
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Black Fraternities & Sororities: A Glorious Past, The Road Ahead
This unique and revealing forum examines the past, present and future of the major Black Greek letter organizations. Compelling dialogue with the organizations' national leadership, college and university officials, undergraduate Greeks, advocates and opponents of Greek organizations provides insight into these revered, yet often misunderstood, organizations.


Panelists: Katie K. White, National Grand Basileus, Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority, Inc.; Henry Ponder, General President, Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc.; Tarrus Richardson, Student Body President, Kappa Alpha Psi, Purdue University; Eunice Thomas, Grand Basileus, Zeta Phi Psi Sorority, Inc.; Diane Houslin, Undergraduate Student, Sigma Gamma Rho, Baruch College; Ulysses McBride, Grand Polemarch, Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity, Inc.; C. Tyrone Gilmore, Grand Basileus, Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Inc.; Jack Creeden, Associate Provost for Student Affairs, Rutgers University; Lawrence Miller, Executive Director, Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity, Inc.; Yvonne Kennedy, National President, Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc.; Mary Shy Scott, President-Elect, Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc.; Israel (Ike) Tribble, President, Florida Endowment Fund; Jim Vance, Host, News Anchor, NBC/WRC-TV; Carol Randolph, Esq., Co-host, Journalist and Talk Show Host


Broadcast Date : 11/90


Original Price: $500


Current Professional Price: $50


Black Fraternities & Sororities: A Glorious Past, The Road Ahead
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Broken Pledges: Fraternities & Sororities At The Crossroads
How are Fraternities and Sororities viewed by students in 1998? By the administration? By the College Community? How have recent news stories about violence in hazing affected the way Greek organizations conduct business?
The answers to these questions and many more are addressed in Black Issues In Higher Education's first videoconference of 1998-99 academic year: Broken Pledges: Fraternities & Sororities At The Crossroads. This videoconference examines the role of Greek organizations in the current culture of higher education and examines every aspect of Greek life. The program brings together a panel of nationally recognized student leaders, alumni, college administrators, Greek representatives, and legal advisors to discuss what fraternities and sororities must do to sustain their traditions. It also addresses how fraternities and sororities should respond when "hazing" goes awry. This is an explosive discussion and a conference that you certainly will not want to miss.


Panelists: Earl S. Richardson, President, Morgan State University; Gloria R. Scott, President, Bennett College; Douglas E. Fierberg, Attorney-at-Law; Hank Nuwer, Author, Educator; Michael V.W. Gordon, Executive Director, The National Pan-Hellenic Council, Inc.; Maureen Syring, Assistant Director, Delta Gamma Foundation; Walter Kimbrough, Director, Student Activities and Leadership, Old Dominion University; James Adams, Moderator, NBC4, Washington, DC


Broadcast Date: 11/99

Original Price: $395

Current Professional Price: $225

Broken Pledges: Fraternities & Sororities At The Crossroads
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Blacks & Latinos in Higher Education: Coalition or Competition?
Blacks and Latinos comprise the two largest minority group populations in America. The potential for their achieving unprecedented educational, political, economic and social progress is universally recognized - provided that they can work together. And here lies the challenge.
On December 2, 1998 we closely examined the things that divide, rather than unite these two groups in Black Issues In Higher Education's second videoconference of the 1998-99 academic year - Blacks & Latinos in Higher Education: Coalition or Competition? To date only scant instances of substantive cooperative efforts exist. At the same time instances of unhealthy competition for federal funds, campus resources and access to power continue to be publicized. This unfortunate trend has been exacerbated by the lack of information about the historic and contemporary cooperation and mutual support between these two dominant minority populations. Whether examining bilingualism, Proposition 187-209-227, Hopwood, Title III, or incarceration rates, it becomes clear that much stands to be gained from mutual understanding and support. It is also very clear that the current generation of college students, administrators, and scholars must develop the skills to bridge the gap. Blacks & Latinos in Higher Education: Coalition or Competition? is the first of its kind videoconference that plots a way for the future.


Panelists: Roger E. Campos, Vice President for Government Relations, Hispanic Association of Colleges and Universities (HACU); Margaret Montoya, Professor of Law, University of New Mexico; M. Rick Turner, Dean of the Office of African American Affairs, University of Virginia; Henry Ponder, President, National Association For Equal Opportunity in Higher Education (NAFEO); Winston E. Thompson, Executive Officer, System Office, Academic Affairs and Research, Connecticut State University; Madelaine Marquez, Director, Center for Innovative Education, Hampshire College; Frances Cress Welsing, Clinical Psychiatrist and Renowned Author; Moderators: Maria Hinojosa, Award-Winning Journalist, Author and CNN Correspondent; Joe Madison, Program Director and Radio One host

Broadcast Date: 12/98

Original Price: $395

Current Professional Price: $250

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Blacks & Latinos in Higher Education: Coalition or Competition?
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College Costs & Financial Aid: What's the Real Bottom Line?
Continued reductions in financial aid and rising tuition have made paying the cost to attend college one of the biggest challenges families face today. Increasingly, students are being forced to re-evaluate their college choices based on what is affordable versus what is educationally best. For some that may mean delaying entry or not attending college at all. How will rising costs affect the future of education of our nation's youth? Are we putting a generation of American achievers at risk? "College Costs & Financial Aid: What's the Real Bottom Line?" explores the critical issues associated with financing a college education.


Panelists: Nancy Kassebaum, U.S. Senator (R-KS); Jamie Merisotis, President, The Institute for Higher Education Policy; Marvalene Hughes, President, California State University-Stanislaus; William Blakey, Partner-Dean, Blakely & Moskowitz, Former staff director & chief counsel for Sen. Paul Simon (D-IL); Brett Lief, President, National Council of Higher Education Loan Programs; Arnold Mitchem, Executive Director, National Council of Educational Opportunity Associations; Susan Kidd, NBC/WRC-TV, Washington, DC, Moderator


Broadcast Date : 10/96

Original Price: $395

Current Professional Price: $150

College Costs & Financial Aid: What's the Real Bottom Line?
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Learning Technologies & Students of Color: Strategies for Enhancing Access & Opportunities
New and emerging technologies continue to have a major impact on the way in which students and instructors think about and approach learning. How colleges and universities can successfully incorporate technology into higher education - especially for students of color who in some cases have had limited exposure to computers, the internet and other technological tools - is the focus of this timely Black Issues In Higher Education videoconference. This videoconference takes a look at new teaching and learning models that allow students to use technology to access information and course materials; innovative software that provides faculty with tools to better manage the learning process; and creative programs to ensure equal access to technology solutions for all students. In addition, this videoconference addresses the changing role of faculty, technology's influence on the culture of teaching and learning, and successful funding and resource sharing programs that enable colleges and universities to meet the needs of students of color.


Panelists: Lucinda Roy, Associate Dean, Curriculum Outreach & Diversity Office, Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University; Dr. Bernard Gifford, President, Founder and Chief Instructional Officer, Academic Systems; Dr. Diana Oblinger, Academic Programs Manager, IBM Corporation, The Institute for Academic Technology; Dr. Alfredo G. Delos Santos Jr., Vice Chancellor, Student & Educational Development, Maricopa County Community College District; Dr. Kamala Anandam, Associate Dean, Educational Technologies, Miami-Dade Community College; Reynold Harris, Chairman, Vice President of Marketing/Sales, City of New Elam, Inc; Derek McGinty, Moderator


Broadcast Date: 3/97


Original Price: $395


Current Professional Price: $175

Learning Technologies & Students of Color: Strategies for Enhancing Access & Opportunities
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Sexual Harassment: Scholarly Definitions & Everyday Realities
Since sexual harassment was defined as a violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 women have faced many obstacles in the workplace. Despite much of the fervor surrounding the sexual harassment issue, numerous charges continue to be levied against individuals, corporations, colleges, Congress and the military. Sexual Harassment: Scholarly Definitions & Everyday Realities examines the factors, including individual responsibility that create a fertile environment for harassment to exist. The program offers sensible remedies to this ever growing plague.


Panelists: Attorney Anita Faye Hill, Professor of Law, University of Oklahoma; Dr. Michael Greve, Executive Director, Center For Individual Rights; Attorney Beth Wilson, Asst. Vice Provost & Equity Officer, Columbia University; Dr. Anne L. Bryant, Executive Director, American Association of University Women; Attorney Emma Coleman Jordan, Professor of Law, Georgetown University; Attorney Ellen J. Vargyas, Legal Counsel, U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission; Moderators: Julianne Malveaux, Nationally Syndicated Columnist/Radio Talk Show Host; Kojo Nnamdi, Host, "Evening Exchange," WHMM TV


Broadcast Date: 3/96

Original Price: $395

Current Professional Price: $150

Sexual Harassment: Scholarly Definitions & Everyday Realities
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The Rise in Campus Racism: Causes & Solutions
Hate crimes. Bigotry. Ethnic Violence. Racism is becoming more visible on the nation's college and university campuses. The Rise in Campus Racism: Causes & Solutions probes into the root causes of this problem and offers discussion, analysis and solutions that are specifically geared to colleges and universities.


Panelists: Michael Williams, Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights, U.S. Department of Education; Na'im Akbar, Psychologist, Educator, Florida State University; Howard J. Ehrlich, Director of Research, National Institute Against Prejudice and Violence; Lillian Roybal Rose, Workshop Educator, Trainer; Mary Ellen Ashley, Vice Provost, University of Cincinnati, Author of Combating Racism on Campus; Jawanza Kunjufu, Aothor of Countering the Conspiracy to Destroy Black Boys; Richard Rubenstein, Director, Center for Conflict Analysis and Resolution, George Mason University; Raynard Davis, Executive Director, D.C. Student Coalition Against Apartheid and Racism; Susan Weidman Schneider, Editor-in-Chief, LILITH, The Nation's Only Independent Jewish Women's Magazine; Reginald Clark, Professor of Afro-Ethnic Studies, California State University-Fullerton; Julian Bond, Moderator


Broadcast Date: 2/91

Original Price: $500

Current Professional Price: $50


The Rise in Campus Racism: Causes & Solutions
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