Volume 91 • Issue 15
February 10, 2023
FSUgatepost.com
‘Chalk’ full of smiles!
Leighah Beausoleil / THE GATEPOST
A chalk-drawn smile on the Framingham State seal outside the Henry Whittemore Library.
Corporate Readiness Academy 101 program prepares students of color for the corporate world By Branden LaCroix News Editor The College of Business began its orporate eadiness Academy Program for the spring semester. The program is a series of workshops and one-on-one conferences that focus on coaching students of color in business management as well as educating them on how to navigate obstacles in corporate workplaces, such as microaggressions, racist incidents, and discrimination. Patricia Thomas, dean of FSU’s College of Business, said, “One of the things that came to the forefront was
the fact that students of color were not getting good jobs. She said, “It was important to have a space for students of color to start a network and have some shifts happening that allows them to be more successful going out so when they graduate, they re not in the same job that they were in while in college.” Thomas said plans were in place to start the program during the Spring 2020 Semester, but the plans were upended by the pandemic. he added looking back, the upside of the plans needing to be pushed back was that she did not have the personnel to put them in motion.
News
She said over the previous summer, she and Erastus Ndinguri, a management and business & IT professor, recruited Professor Denise Brown to help the program get up and running. The program is primarily designed and led by Sunni McCoy, a visiting lecGatepost Archives turer and enterprise Lean leader at GE SGA pg. 3 Healthcare. McCoy explained the program is PREMIUM SINGLES pg. 6 intended to “demystify” a lot about working in the corporate world as a person of color, addressing the issues people of color often face, and filling the “gaps” in corporate workplaces. AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY pg. 7
Opinions
See CORPORATE READINESS page 4 ‘BENCH’ pg. 8
Explorer of the universe, Vandana Singh encourages global optimism
By Emily Rosenberg Associate Editor
As a young girl, Vandana Singh said she dreamed of being an explorer and traveling the world. “I wanted to live with other species because non-humans really fascinated me. I was a shy kid,” she said. hile ingh s official job title is not “explorer,” she does explore the depth of the world as she studies and presents on the global climate crisis and travels the Universe via a pen through her creative works of speculative fiction. In 2023, Singh, who describes herself as an “earthling” on the “About” page of her website, continues to build
an impactful career as a physics and environment professor in the FSU Environment, Society, and Sustainability Department and an author. After earning her Ph.D. in theoretical particle physics at Louisiana State University, Singh said she planned to move back to her home in New Delhi, ndia, where she lived the first years of her life. But “life had other plans,” she said. In 2003, Singh was hired as a visiting lecturer for the then Department of Physics at Framingham State College, which she described at the time as a “sleepier, quieter place.” Singh now teaches a course she designed on climate justice for ams ,
Sports
a program which was implemented recently into the curriculum to acclimate first year students to college life. n the course, she teaches students about the crisis through a case study she built when she traveled to the North Slope of Arctic Alaska and interviewed native people and scientists. Adrien Gobin / THE GATEPOST he said she first became interested in taking her climate research to BASKETBALL pg. 9 the next level after an event in 2007 in which she and a group led by English Professor Lisa Eck and Sociology Professor irginia utter organi ed to raise awareness. CHILEMASS EVENT pg. 11 At the event, nearly 500 people
Arts & Features
See VANDANA SINGH page 12 IAFSA pg. 13
INSIDE: OP/ED 7 • SPORTS 9 • ARTS & FEATURES 11