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T HE T UFTS DAILY
VOLUME LXXXI, ISSUE 16
tuftsdaily.com
Friday, October 8, 2021
MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, MASS.
Schuler Education Foundation awards Tufts $25 million challenge grant by Charlotte Chen Contributing Writer
Tufts was recently selected by the Schuler Education Foundation to participate in a multiyear, $25 million challenge grant as part of the foundation’s Schuler Access Initiative, which aims to increase the number of undocumented and Pell Grant-eligible students admitted to top universities. The Schuler Education Foundation will match Tufts community members’ donations up to $25 million and put all of the money toward financial aid for undocumented and Pelleligible students. The Schuler Access Initiative will invest a total of $500 million across participating colleges and universities over a ten-year period. The co-founders of the Schuler Education Foundation, Jack Schuler and his daughter Tanya Schuler Sharman, are both Tufts alumni. “I have been a great believer of these low-income, first-generation minority kids getting into top colleges for over twenty years,” Jack Schuler said.
To be selected as a recipient, Tufts underwent a review by members of the Schuler Education Foundation. The review considered Tufts’ selectivity, willingness to match the grant amount and commitment to increasing its enrollment of Pell-eligible and undocumented students. Tufts University President Anthony Monaco expressed optimism about the university’s ability to raise the $25 million. He explained that Tufts has had plenty of experience with challenge grants, both in the undergraduate school and across its graduate and professional programs. “We know that [challenge grants are] a very effective mechanism for donors to make a commitment to something that they want to support,” Monaco said. “When they hear that the university or another donor is stepping up with that level of commitment, it sometimes brings people in that were hesitant before.” Monaco said that one of the biggest obstacles to admitting more undocumented and Pell-
eligible students is helping them to feel integrated and welcomed into the Tufts community. “[Students] come from such a variety of backgrounds … and we want to be as welcoming as Tufts should be to all students,” Monaco said. “And so, the support that we need to provide is programmatic, it’s academic, it’s having the ability to join clubs and organizations [and having] that kind of spending cash in your financial aid package to afford textbooks.” Jared Smith, director of the FIRST Resource Center, discussed how the challenge grant could positively impact underrepresented communities at Tufts. “As the point person for students in these communities (First Generation, Low-Income, and students with undocumented status), I look forward to seeing how these funds will serve as a catalyst to expanding support for these populations,” Smith wrote in an email to the Daily. “My hope is that increases to financial aid will only continue to help broaden access to a Tufts education.”
MICHELLE LI / THE TUFTS DAILY
The front of Dowling Hall, the location of the Financial Aid office, is pictured. Tufts Dean of Admissions JT Duck expressed gratitude to the Schuler Education Foundation and excitement about the opportunities the money may provide. “I am so grateful to the Schuler Education Foundation for initiating this challenge grant, and for all of the people at Tufts that put together a competitive application,” Duck wrote in an email to the Daily. Rob Mack, associate provost and chief diversity officer, explained how the Schuler Access Initiative challenge grant represents an extension of the university’s ongoing efforts to raise money for financial aid.
“Fundraising for financial aid has been a top priority of President Monaco and his senior team and this opportunity is the perfect alignment for this effort,” Mack wrote in an email to the Daily. “We have a record of donor generosity that has supported this goal and I believe we will continue our success to cultivate these gifts.” The Schuler Education Foundation plans to involve about 20 colleges in its challenge grant initiative. So far, Kenyon College, Carleton College, Bates College and Union College have been selected in addition to Tufts.
Office of Equal Opportunity sees rise in Medford joins Race to cases reported, remains optimistic Zero campaign, pledges to cut greenhouse gas emissions in half by 2030 by Madeline Wilson Contributing Writer
A recent statistical report by the Tufts Office of Equal Opportunity indicated that the number of cases reported has been steadily increasing over the past five fiscal years. It states that the total caseload of reported allegations has risen from 668 reports in the 2019 fiscal year to 718 reports in the 2020 fiscal year. This data is consistent with the continual increase in reports over the last five years, a trend that Jill Zellmer, executive director of OEO, attributes to the cultural climate nationwide. “There have been more prominent incidents of public harassment and discrimination … in the news in the last 5-6 years,” Zellmer wrote in an email to the Daily. “Tufts is not immune to this behavior, unfortunately.” OEO is an administrative organization on campus concerned with managing and preventing instances of discrimination and misconduct among employees and students. “Our primary responsibility is to establish uniform guide-
by Kendall Roberts
Executive Social Media Editor
COURTESY MARLEY HILLMAN, ELISE SOMMERS AND MAURI TRIMMER
The Cannon, painted with a message raising awareness for Green Dot, is pictured in 2019. lines in order to promote a work and educational environment at Tufts University that is free of discrimination and harassment and to affirm Tufts’ commitment to equal opportunity, Title VI, Title VII, Title IX, and affirmative action,” Zellmer said. The reporting statistics indicate that allegations of Title VI violations more than doubled over the last year, growing from 45 reports in 2019 to 91 in 2020. Title VI violations refer to non-sexual instances of misconduct between students, including conflicts related to race, ethnicity or religion.
“Harassment of these types has increased across the country in the past several years, including during the pandemic,” Zellmer said. Zellmer also noted that OEO recognized a change in the quantity and type of cases reported over the course of the COVID-19 pandemic. “In the 2020-2021 academic year, OEO experienced an increase in reports of cyber harassment of all types including cyber racial harassment, cyber sexual harassment, cybersee OEO, page 2
The City of Medford announced on Sept. 30 its commitment to the international Race to Zero campaign and pledged to cut its greenhouse gas emissions in half by 2030. The city also released an executive summary of its Climate Action and Adaptation Plan draft, outlining the city’s objectives and plans to address climate change in the upcoming years. The Race to Zero campaign is a global initiative backed by the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change that seeks to mobilize a coalition of countries, cities, businesses and individuals toward urgent climate change action. The campaign’s primary objective is for its participants to commit to zero net emissions by 2050. Medford joins other neighboring Massachusetts communities in this pledge, including Somerville, Cambridge and Boston.
ARTS / page 4
OPINION / page 7
SPORTS / back
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Rocco DiRico, executive director of government and community relations at Tufts, works closely with Tufts’ host communities and is hopeful about Medford’s commitment. “Medford [has] been a local leader in clean energy, climate resiliency, and sustainability,” DiRico wrote in an email to the Daily. “Medford is already working on some of these goals, so I think that these efforts are obtainable by 2030.” According to Alicia Hunt, Medford’s director of planning, development and sustainability, the city has already been working toward reducing greenhouse gas emissions for the past 20 years. Hunt explained that joining the Race to Zero campaign was a natural extension of Medford’s past work. “Medford has always been a city that signs onto these and says we understand that climate is an urgent problem, that it see CLIMATE, page 2 NEWS
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