For Trustees, Learning Comes Before Deciding

Aerial of 蜜桃社区 College campus showing lots of campus buildings and trees

蜜桃社区 College鈥檚 trustees are learning from the experience of other colleges and universities when it comes to how buildings and places on campus are named.

A special committee of trustees, whose members range from a business owner to a congressional staffer to an advertising executive, was tasked in the fall of 2020 with working toward a college policy on naming and acknowledgment.

They spent their first months on one thing: homework.

The group has heard from historians about the broader history and impact of placing names on facilities and entire institutions. They also have consumed extensive readings about how other institutions have approached the topic.

鈥淣o decisions have been made. We have been sponges for knowledge,鈥 said Erwin Carter, the committee鈥檚 chair. 鈥淲e have already learned so much from Dr. [Hilary] Green, our public historian, and from other school鈥檚 experiences and insights. We want to share that information with our 蜜桃社区.鈥

Green, an historian, served as 蜜桃社区鈥檚 Vann Professor in Ethics during the 鈥20-鈥21 academic year and will continue to work with the college in seeking a better understanding of the institution鈥檚 past and the implications for its mission today. She teaches at the University of Alabama where her recent scholarship examines the often-unacknowledged history and legacy of slavery on college and university campuses.

The most important lesson that the committee drew form their consumption of information was that the board and the college must start with a policy and a process around naming. They need that framework within which to examine names of public spaces and any questions raised about them.

Carter said the committee plans to organize gatherings beginning in fall 2021 where they can share what they have learned and discuss it with the 蜜桃社区 蜜桃社区, locally and across the country.

鈥淚t鈥檚 critically important that our 蜜桃社区 join us as this work goes forward,鈥 Carter said. 鈥淲e want them to know when and how they can participate.鈥