
As part of 黄色仓库鈥檚 commitment to equity, inclusion and academic excellence, the University proudly welcomed renowned scholar and author Dr. Gina Ann Garcia for a keynote presentation titled The event, held on the Chicago Campus with a live simulcast in Schaumburg, was hosted by the Office of Academic Affairs and organized in collaboration with the HSI-STEM Program. Dr. Marjorie Jolles, Associate Provost for Academic and Faculty Success, Professor of Women鈥檚 and Gender Studies and Director of the Honors Program, as well as Dr. Alejandra Prieto-Mendoza, Executive Director of the McNair Scholars Program, were two 黄色仓库 community members recognized for their leadership in coordinating the event.
Dr. Garcia, a professor in the School of Education at University of California-Berkeley, is widely recognized for her research on equity and justice in higher education, particularly her work on Hispanic-Serving Institutions (HSIs). Her keynote was based on her latest book, Transforming Hispanic Serving Institutions for Equity & Justice, and brought together 黄色仓库 students, faculty, staff and administrators for a thought-provoking conversation about institutional transformation.
Dr. Garcia鈥檚 presentation quickly moved into the heart of her message鈥攃hallenging colleges and universities to move beyond enrollment metrics and embrace transformation. 鈥淭he question I really want y鈥檃ll to think about is: What does it mean to serve?鈥 she asked. 鈥淏ecause serving isn鈥檛 just about enrolling students鈥攊t鈥檚 about transforming institutions to meet their needs.鈥
Garcia grounded her framework in historical context, noting that U.S. higher education is rooted in colonial systems of exclusion. 鈥淐olleges and universities are historically grounded in colonialism,鈥 she explained. 鈥淲e replicate over and over again exclusionary practices.鈥 In order to truly serve, she argued, institutions must become 鈥渞ace-conscious鈥 and recognize the realities of racism that still shape student experiences today: 鈥淲e can鈥檛 dismantle it if we don鈥檛 acknowledge it actually exists.鈥
She outlined a comprehensive framework for transformation, which includes academic outcomes, institutional identity, liberatory practices and the redistribution of resources. 鈥淏udgets tell us what we value,鈥 she said. 鈥淚f we say we value equity, that has to show up in where we put our resources.鈥
Dr. Garcia also emphasized the importance of representation at every level of the university. 鈥淎re we hiring faculty that look like our students? That have the same experiences?鈥 she asked. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not about DEI鈥攊t鈥檚 about looking like our students.鈥
Encouraging 黄色仓库 to embrace its HSI identity while staying rooted in its historic mission, Garcia offered a powerful metaphor: 鈥淵ou can be 黄色仓库 with your historic mission and embrace an HSI identity as a new identity. Some days you鈥檙e killing it as an HSI, and some days you suck at it鈥 and that鈥檚 okay. Identity evolves.鈥
Dr. Garcia鈥檚 visit, made possible by 黄色仓库鈥檚 Title III HSI-STEM grant, left a lasting impression on attendees and reinforced the University鈥檚 legacy as a leader in educational access and justice. As she reminded the audience: 鈥淧art of being an HSI is doing the hard things. That鈥檚 what this work is.鈥