Two sisters — one looks white, the other black. Here’s what happened when they went to the store. Spoiler alert: they weren’t treated the same way.
2 Women Just Proved Why Talking About Race Is One Of The Most Important Things You Can Do
While the Daily Show is a comedy show, this clip illustrates how our own race influences our perceptions:
Harvard Business School Case Study: Gender Equity by Jodi Kantor, NYTimes
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/08/education/harvard-case-study-gender-equity.html?_r=0
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The Unfinished Business of the 1963 March on Washington from the Economic Policy Institute
This infographic compares 1963 to 2012, illustrating how much further there is to go…
http://www.epi.org/multimedia/infographic-unfinished-business-1963-march/
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Italy’s First Black Minister Finds Herself A Target Of Slurs by Sylvia Poggioli/NPR
Racism in Italy:
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How Carnegie Mellon Increased the Proportion of Women in Computer Science From 7% to 42%
The sciences have historically been a tough place for women. Here’s more on what Carnegie Mellon is doing to change that for Computer Science:
Seeking Edge in Academics, Chinese Spend Summer in U.S. by By JANE PERLEZ and HELEN GAO, NY Times
“By some estimates, more than 100,000 Chinese students, some as young as 10, flocked to the United States this summer to delve into American life and culture. Some studied diligently in programs intended to improve their SAT scores. Others kicked back and enjoyed more leisurely pursuits, on group tours that visited Las Vegas, New York and Disneyland. Some attended outdoor camps.
The surge in students traveling to the United States for the summer is the latest iteration in China’s booming multibillion-dollar overseas education business. Until recently, the vast number of Chinese education agencies that broker students’ entry to American colleges and private high schools concentrated on preparing them at home in China. They coached well-off, fee-paying, and, in some cases, brilliant Chinese students in the intricacies of the American admissions process.”
Liberal Education in Authoritarian Places by By JIM SLEEPER, NY Times
The challenge of US Universities opening branch campuses abroad. “At its best, a liberal education imbues future citizen-leaders with the values and skills that are necessary to question, not merely serve, concentrations of power and profit. Universities that abandon this ideal are lending their good names to the decline of liberal education; turning themselves into career-networking centers for a global managerial work force that answers to no republican polity or moral code; and cheapening the value of the diplomas they hand out, at home and abroad.”
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/01/opinion/sunday/liberal-education-in-authoritarian-places.html?hp
World of Grief and Doubt After an Adoptee’s Death by By RACHEL L. SWARNS and DAVID M. HERSZENHORN, NY Times
Issues of culture, diplomacy, expectations, and child rearing often emerge in international adoption cases.
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How Do You Say …? For Some Words, There’s No Easy Translation from NPR
Words with no easy translation in English!