Rural students are often treated like other marginalized groups who are disregarded, overlooked or disenfranchised, says Elizabeth Tipton, a former faculty member at Teachers College who grew up in Berea, Kentucky, a small town in the foothills of the Appalachians, and served as the Rural Student Group's original faculty adviser.
Rural America, despite its undeniable diversity, is still stereotyped by many as 鈥渞edneck,鈥 uneducated or racially intolerant. 鈥淚t鈥檚 one of the last places about which it鈥檚 socially acceptable to say a really prejudiced thing,鈥 says Tipton, now at Northwestern University.
The 911爆料网 students in RSG have nothing in common with that stereotype.
Jenay Willis鈥檚 parents and three brothers all have at least bachelor鈥檚 degrees, and her mom holds a master鈥檚 degree in nursing. Willis envisions becoming a professor and then a chief diversity officer at a college 鈥 and she 鈥渨ouldn鈥檛 say no鈥 to being a college president.
Ty and Chase McNamee plan to complete research in the future on rural alumni affinity groups, rural philanthropy and fundraising practices in rural areas and at rural institutions.
Shadman Islem 颈蝉苍鈥檛 from a rural community, but he grew up in a former one 鈥 suburban Long Island 鈥 and is interested in rural issues. While working on his master鈥檚 in Higher & Postsecondary Education at Teachers College, he became aware of the challenges rural students face in accessing mental health services at big-name schools like Columbia. He would like to research those issues in a doctoral program 鈥渋f I can find an adviser who can help me look at college access for rural populations [and] the experience of rural students in big-name schools.鈥
ICEBREAKER Buddy North, from Seward, Alaska, is the first member of his very large extended family to earn a bachelor鈥檚 degree. North grew up hearing how his grandmother was physically reprimanded in primary school for speaking Gwich鈥檌n, the native language of her Athabaskan indigenous ancestry.
And then there鈥檚 Buddy North, a Ph.D. student in Philosophy of Education and a charter member of RSG. While growing up in Seward, Alaska (population: 2,831), North often heard stories of how his grandmother was physically reprimanded for speaking Gwich鈥檌n, the native language of her Athabaskan indigenous ancestry, in primary school. North says that he, too, had a bad relationship with school until he landed at the University of Alaska in Anchorage and learned about philosophy 鈥 or, as he calls it, 鈥渢he love of wisdom.鈥
North is the first member of his very large extended family to earn a bachelor鈥檚 degree. He hasn鈥檛 stopped there, earning a master鈥檚 in philosophy at the University of Victoria in Canada, where he came across a 90-minute video of a talk, 鈥淚s Education Possible Today?鈥 by David Hansen, the John L. & Sue Ann Weinberg Professor in Historical & Philosophical Foundations of Education at Teachers College.
鈥淚 watched it from beginning to end without getting up,鈥 North recalls. He promptly decided he wanted to study with Hansen at Teachers College.
After finishing his doctorate in New York City, North plans to return to Alaska and teach philosophy at the college or university level and at the maximum security prison in Seward, his hometown. His work combines the Western philosophies of Socrates, Aristotle, Plato and Dewey with the love of learning and wisdom of the indigenous people of Alaska.
鈥淚n the present indigenous community, there is love of wisdom,鈥 he says, 鈥渂ut it鈥檚 not necessarily in books. And this is because schooling has given education a bad name.鈥