Harriet Tubman Center hosts talk on STEM in Black communities Provided by Tubman Center Calvin Mackie was the second speaker of “The 3 Rs: The Road to Reparations and Reconciliation” series hosted by the Binghamton University Harriet Tubman Center for the Study of Freedom and Equity.
Calvin Mackie relayed his hope for STEM education as a form of reparations
April 19, 2021
After a year of hardship and uncertainty, Calvin Mackie spoke of the importance of never losing hope at his virtual talk hosted by Binghamton University’s Harriet Tubman Center for the Study of Freedom and Equity over Zoom on Wednesday.
Mackie is the managing partner at Channel ZerO Group, chair of the Louisiana Council on the Social Status of Black Boys and Men and president and founder of STEM NOLA, which stands for science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) in New Orleans, Louisiana and is a nonprofit community-based STEM program for children. This was the second event of the
“The 3 Rs: The Road to Reparations and Reconciliation” virtual talk educates students to address reconciliation of racial issues Provided by BU Harriet Tubman Center Mary Frances Berry, an international civil rights activist, and Hilary Robertson-Hickling, a scholar of the Caribbean diaspora, spoke with students about reparations, truth and reconciliation.
BU s Harriet Tubman Center hosted Mary Frances Berry, Hilary Robertson-Hickling who spoke on restorative justice, colonialism
April 12, 2021
Mary Frances Berry, an international civil rights activist, and Hilary Robertson-Hickling, a scholar of the Caribbean diaspora, gave a virtual talk about reparations and reconciliation at Binghamton University via Zoom on Thursday.
The event, titled “The 3 Rs: The Road to Reparations and Reconciliation,” was hosted by the BU Harriet Tubman Center for the Study of Freedom and Equity as part of an ongoing conversation the University is having about truth and reconcilia