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November 6, 2019

College of Communication and Information Hosts Panel to Commemorate 70th Anniversary of Integration at University of Kentucky

Finding our Place

Finding our Place

Note: This article contains a reference to UK's Bias Incident Response Team, which no longer exists. To report discrimination, harassment or sexual misconduct, visit https://cm.maxient.com/reportingform.php?UnivofKentucky&layout_id=30.

In 1949, Lyman T. Johnson bravely chose to be the first African-American student at the University of Kentucky. He overcame obstacles and carved his own path here at UK.

To commemorate the 70th anniversary of integration at the University of Kentucky, the College of Communication and Information will host a panel discussion titled “Finding Our Place: How Black Americans use social media to carve out their own niche,” at 3 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 7, in the William T. Young Library UK Athletics Association Auditorium. The event is free and open to the public.

The panel brings together researchers, academics and experts in the field to discuss how underrepresented minorities can use social media to expand and support social ties, and function as an extended family when they are far from home pursuing new opportunities, like attending college.

André L. Brock is an associate professor of black digital media at Georgia Tech. His research examines racial representation in video games, black women and weblogs, whiteness, blackness and digital technoculture as well as groundbreaking studies on Black Twitter.

Raven Maragh-Lloyd is an assistant professor of communication studies at Gonzaga University.  Her research examines digital media culture specifically relating to race and gender studies. She examines the ways that Black and African-Americans use established communication channels for surviving, increasing visibility and creating community.

DeShana Collett is an assistant professor in the University of Kentucky College of Health Sciences, where she is the course director for the clinical methods and patient evaluations management courses within the physician assistant program. Her research relates to discourses that center around inclusion and equity, with interest in health and healthcare equality, particularly intimate partner violence.

Brandon Jamal Colbert is the coordinator for social justice education and engagement for the University of Kentucky’s Bias Incident Support Services. He develops and implements social justice-centered programming, workshops and dialogues. He was the inaugural recipient of the LeadBlue Diversity and Inclusion Award, the most recent recipient of the Otis A. Singletary Senior Award for Outstanding Leadership and the 2019 Inclusive Excellence Recognition Award.

“It’s important to honor and respect the past as we move forward into the future. The University of Kentucky and our college  have made many strides in becoming diverse and inclusive spaces,” said Shannon Oltmann, College of Communication and Information College Diversity Officer.  “We are choosing to commemorate the legacy of integration with a panel that focuses on the unique ways that African-Americans have become part of our community and simultaneously carved out their own niches.”

The panel will give students, academic staff, professionals and researchers a space to discuss amplifying this cultural support of African-American students on UK’s campus.

Each college at the University of Kentucky is hosting events to commemorate 70 years of integration on campus. This event is one way that the College of Communication and Information has chosen to celebrate the year. Additionally, CI held a book club using Trevor Noah’s “Born a Crime” story in conjunction with his appearance at UK in August.

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