WOMEN’S LACROSSE
New group supports women in international relations see FEATURES / PAGE 3
Jumbos bounce back in overtime after 1st loss of season
Women’s tennis wins 2 home games in a row see SPORTS / BACK PAGE
SEE SPORTS / BACK PAGE
THE
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T HE T UFTS DAILY
VOLUME LXXVII, ISSUE 58
Thursday, April 25, 2019
MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, MASS.
tuftsdaily.com
Dean of Admissions Karen Richardson announces departure from Tufts by Austin Clementi News Editor
Karen Richardson, the dean of Admissions since 2016, will leave Tufts to pursue a career as dean of Admission at Princeton University, her alma mater, according to an announcement on Princeton’s website. Richardson has worked at Princeton before as the assistant dean of Undergraduate Admission from 2002 to 2004, according to the website. The website also states that Richardson focused her time at Princeton on diversity recruitment. She came to Tufts in 2008 as the director of Diversity Recruitment and moved on to become the director of Graduate Admissions in 2014, according to TuftsNow. Richardson first came to Tufts after working in the Boston Public Schools, saying that she enjoyed working with Tufts’ Admissions team. Richardson said she appreciated how Tufts thought about admitting students and building a community. Richardson, who said she is among the first generation in her family to go to college, has worked in education for a number of years, including for Jumpstart and Boston Public Schools. She emphasized how her experience as a first-generation student informed her career. “Access to education was something that was important to my parents, and they instilled that in us. And I realized that college [was] a transformational experience for me,” she said. “The opportunities that were given to me [in college] … lent [themselves] to the work I decided to do after I got out of college.”
Richardson said her experience in college and her later career paths led her to her becoming passionate about access to education. “I think it is important to [expose] students to opportunities that they might not know they had,” she said. Speaking about her career before Tufts, Richardson highlighted her experience as deputy superintendent of family and community engagement for Boston Public Schools. Richardson worked with families throughout the school district to encourage involvement with school councils and parent councils. “That was an important role for me in that we were trying to encourage more family involvement in the schools,” she said. “I think it’s been very helpful in a career in Admissions, because applying to college and going to college is not just about the individual student; it’s about the family making the decision.” According to TuftsNow, Richardson developed the Voices of Tufts Diversity Experiences program as director of Diversity Recruitment. “We wanted the program to be … more academically focused and to be not just a program but an experience where students could get an opportunity to really see if there could be a fit at the university for them,” Richardson said. In particular, Richardson noted that small groups that are part of Voices allow admissions counselors to meet students, and students who may not have the opportunity to participate in alumni interviews can make an impression on admissions officers. Richardson applauded that her office has expanded recruitment capabilities during
DOGACAN COLAK / THE TUFTS DAILY
Karen Richardson, dean of Admissions, poses for a portrait in Bendetson Hall on April 4. her time at Tufts, becoming a QuestBridge partner school and attending different fairs in locations where students might not know about Tufts. “One of the important pieces at Tufts … is that recruitment of all students is the responsibility of everyone in our office, because diversity means a lot of different things,” Richardson said. “It’s not just racial and ethnic diversity … it’s also socioeconomic diversity and geographic diversity.”
However, Richardson admitted that Tufts does not always succeed in recruiting students from different socioeconomic backgrounds. “I’m proud of the fact that we’re a school that meets 100% of demonstrated need … but we are one of the most selective schools that are need-aware,” Richardson said. She added that Tufts first reads applications on a need-blind basis, but the final
see RICHARDSON, page 2
Tufts to offer Native American and Indigenous Studies minor in fall 2019 by Abbie Gruskin News Editor
Tufts faculty voted in favor of the creation of a Native American and Indigenous Studies (NAIS) minor, to be offered next fall within the Consortium of Studies in Race, Colonialism, and Diaspora (RCD), at a meeting last Wednesday, according to a press release provided to the Daily provided by Parker Breza, a student central to creating the minor. The vote comes after three years of planning and organization by students and faculty, Associate Professor of Anthropology
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and Director of Colonialism Studies Amahl Bishara told the Daily in an email. The press release credited a student movement for spearheading the initiative for a NAIS minor at Tufts after the name change from Columbus Day to Indigenous People’s Day in fall 2017. Students petitioned for the minor during the 2017–2018 academic year with a survey to measure student interest, which showed that 244 students would take a class in NAIS, and 73 would pursue a minor in NAIS if given the opportunity, according to the press release. A separate petition supporting the initiative circulated in November 2018 was signed by For breaking news, our content archive and exclusive content, visit tuftsdaily.com @tuftsdaily
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30 student groups, demonstrating continued student interest in NAIS courses, according to the press release. This persistent push for a NAIS minor on campus confirms the passion of both faculty and students for the program, according to Darren Lone Fight, lecturer in RCD and a member of the Three Affiliated Tribes. “The demand for a NAIS minor has paralleled and been part of a larger awareness campaign that included recognition of Indigenous Peoples Day at Tufts in 2016,” Lone Fight wrote in an email to the Daily. “While there has been faculty support, this demand has been largely a student-led and stu-
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dent-run initiative. The effort and energy discussing, advocating, and planning the minor has indeed been shared across students and faculty over many years,” he said. The RCD compiled appropriate courses already offered on campus and looked to other universities for guidance in crafting the curriculum for the new minor, according to Lone Fight. “Beyond looking at the structure of the NAIS minor across disciplinary formations, we also looked to other national programs and peer institutions offering NAIS programming as a
NEWS............................................1 FEATURES.................................3 ARTS & LIVING.......................4
see NAIS, page 2
FUN & GAMES.........................5 OPINION.....................................6 SPORTS............................ BACK