Vulnerabilities for Marginalized Groups in the United States Forensic Anthropology Education System: Paths to Engagement and Belonging
Abstract
:Diversity and its representation in higher education have been issues I have contended with personally throughout my career. Being Afro-Latinx, I have encountered the blatant lack of understanding that people have for students of color in academia. There is always a feeling of being “othered” and not belonging in higher education, especially at predominantly white institutions. This was not a space for someone who looked like me nor thought how I did. I have been one of the few, if not, the only man of color in many of my graduate courses, at national conferences, on committees, and in the professional world as a practicing forensic anthropologist. I would have to work twice as hard to achieve the same success, and not question the scholarship I was taught. If I kept my head down and did the work, I would not be questioned about my place in the discipline and broader academia. Despite this, I was. I have been told by my peers and senior colleagues that I was accepted at programs and employed solely because of my ethnic background, despite having strong academic and professional credentials. I have been used as the ‘token’ scholar to emulate. The system in place is not welcoming to systematically marginalized students and I have tried to be a mentor to as many marginalized students as I can. However, being their primary advocate has been taxing, especially with barriers being put up by institutions and governing bodies. I see the lack of diversity every day and want to change how we teach and mentor our students.—Jesse R. Goliath
1. Introduction: Stating and Clarifying the Problem
Entering graduate school, particularly within a PWI (predominately white institution), has provided me with ample experiences during my education that have given me pause and aroused concern for my belonging in a given classroom. I am a bi-racial, queer, cis-gendered woman whose background education is outside of anthropology. Coming to anthropology, I’ve had to contend with spaces that range from subliminally to overtly detrimental to my sense of belonging in learning and research spaces. Having to sit through other students promote eugenic policies (knowingly or not), exclusively or predominantly reading from authors who would not have considered me a whole person, being purposefully excluded from collaborative learning spaces, and other types of experiences like this have intermittently been present in my first foray into graduate education. Not to say that all of my classes are like this or that my faculty aren’t supportive, but it is important to acknowledge the ways in which this discipline, in particular, still holds onto and perpetuates pedagogical and research practices that are harmful. There have been moments I’ve thought about leaving or I’ve contemplated shifting my research/academic focus, but the reasons to stay seem to outweigh the reasons to leave. The peer support that I’ve found has been a significant component to my developing feeling of safety in these spaces, along with solid and engaged mentorship from an array of faculty and a sense of community amongst other researchers of similar interests. And I understand that the reasons to leave won’t change instantly or even quickly, but discussing the ways in which exclusion and harm function in educational spaces is an important early step in mitigating them.—Taylor S. Borgelt
2. Vulnerability in Education
I am a white, cis-female, practicing Jew, who has repeatedly been overtly told and actively treated as if I appear much younger than my chronological age would suggest. I have been subject to sexism, ageism, and religious ignorance and intolerance. None of these experiences or intersectionalities have had as great an effect on me personally compared with an interaction I had with a student in serving as the undergraduate academic adviser for my Anthropology department. This student identifies as a black female studying biological anthropology who I had as a student in many classes. We were meeting to help her find space in her tight, 4th year schedule for a cultural Anthropology class, a desire I initially found out of place. I asked why she was so drawn to the course content. The student replied that she had little to no interest in the course content itself, however she had to take a class with her before graduation. I realized the faculty member she referred to is the only black (female) faculty member in our department. The student had tears in her eyes realizing the brief time she had to achieve this integral step in her education.
I have never personally, consciously, acknowledged a lack of representation that defined me or my academic trajectory. This student deeply opened my eyes to the power, importance, and necessity of representation in academia. While I pride myself as a passionate, engaged, present, and involved academic advisor I could never replace or model her presence and achievement in this student’s eyes.—Erin B. Waxenbaum
3. Mitigating Colonially Informed Harm in Educational Spaces
3.1. Fostering Diversity, Inclusion, and Belonging
3.2. Effective Mentorship: One Road to Inclusion
3.3. Peer Engagement: Normalizing Academia
4. Belonging: A Path Forward
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Goliath, J.R.; Waxenbaum, E.B.; Borgelt, T.S. Vulnerabilities for Marginalized Groups in the United States Forensic Anthropology Education System: Paths to Engagement and Belonging. Humans 2023, 3, 126-136. https://doi.org/10.3390/humans3020011
Goliath JR, Waxenbaum EB, Borgelt TS. Vulnerabilities for Marginalized Groups in the United States Forensic Anthropology Education System: Paths to Engagement and Belonging. Humans. 2023; 3(2):126-136. https://doi.org/10.3390/humans3020011
Chicago/Turabian StyleGoliath, Jesse R., Erin B. Waxenbaum, and Taylor S. Borgelt. 2023. "Vulnerabilities for Marginalized Groups in the United States Forensic Anthropology Education System: Paths to Engagement and Belonging" Humans 3, no. 2: 126-136. https://doi.org/10.3390/humans3020011
APA StyleGoliath, J. R., Waxenbaum, E. B., & Borgelt, T. S. (2023). Vulnerabilities for Marginalized Groups in the United States Forensic Anthropology Education System: Paths to Engagement and Belonging. Humans, 3(2), 126-136. https://doi.org/10.3390/humans3020011