Skip to content Skip to search

Republish This Story

* Please read before republishing *

We’re happy to make this story available to republish for free under an Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives Creative Commons license as long as you follow our republishing guidelines, which require that you credit The 19th and retain our pixel. See our full guidelines for more information.

To republish, simply copy the HTML at right, which includes our tracking pixel, all paragraph styles and hyperlinks, the author byline and credit to The 19th. Have questions? Please email [email protected].

— The Editors

Loading...

Modal Gallery

/
Sign up for our newsletter

Menu

  • Our Mission
  • Our Team
  • Latest Stories
  • Search
  • Upcoming Events
  • Contact Us
  • Newsletter
  • Donate
  • Work With Us
  • Fellowships
    • From the Collection

      Changing Child Care

      Illustration of a woman feeding a baby a bottle
      • 1 in 4 parents report being fired for work interruptions due to child care breakdowns

        Chabeli Carrazana · February 2
      • Washington, D.C., offers financial relief to local child care workers

        Orion Rummler · September 20
      • As climate change worsens hurricane season in Louisiana, doulas are ensuring parents can safely feed their babies

        Jessica Kutz · May 5
    • From the Collection

      Next-Gen GOP

      Illustration of a woman riding an elephant
      • Mayra Flores’ victory set a record for women in Congress. It also reflects the growing visibility of Republican Latinas

        Candice Norwood · June 21
      • A banner year for Republican women

        Amanda Becker · November 11
      • Republican women could double representation in the U.S. House

        Amanda Becker · November 4
    • From the Collection

      On The Rise

      Illustration of three women marching
      • Can Cheri Beasley build a winning coalition in North Carolina?

        Candice Norwood · October 11
      • Los Angeles has never elected a woman mayor. Karen Bass hopes to change that.

        Nadra Nittle · September 8
      • Judge J. Michelle Childs is confirmed to D.C. appeals court

        Candice Norwood · July 20
    • From the Collection

      Pandemic Within a Pandemic

      Illustration of four people marching for Black Lives Matter with coronavirus as the backdrop
      • Some LGBTQ+ people worry that the COVID-19 vaccine will affect HIV medication. It won’t.

        Orion Rummler · November 23
      • Why are more men dying from COVID? It’s a complicated story of nature vs. nurture, researchers say

        Mariel Padilla · September 22
      • Few incarcerated women were released during COVID. The ones who remain have struggled.

        Candice Norwood · August 17
    • From the Collection

      Portraits of a Pandemic

      Illustration of a woman wearing a mask and holding up the coronavirus
      • For family caregivers, COVID is a mental health crisis in the making

        Shefali Luthra · October 8
      • A new database tracks COVID-19’s effects on sex and gender

        Shefali Luthra · September 15
      • Pregnant in a pandemic: The 'perfect storm for a crisis'

        Shefali Luthra · August 25
    • From the Collection

      The 19th Explains

      People walking from many articles to one article where they can get the context they need on an issue.
      • The 19th Explains: Who will be most impacted by Medicaid changes — and when

        Rebekah Barber · March 28
      • The 19th Explains: What we know about Brittney Griner’s case and what it took to get her home

        Candice Norwood, Katherine Gilyard · December 8
      • The 19th Explains: Why the Respect for Marriage Act doesn’t codify same-sex marriage rights

        Kate Sosin · December 8
    • From the Collection

      The Electability Myth

      Illustration of three women speaking at podiums
      • Mayra Flores’ victory set a record for women in Congress. It also reflects the growing visibility of Republican Latinas

        Candice Norwood · June 21
      • Stepping in after tragedy: How political wives became widow lawmakers

        Mariel Padilla · May 24
      • Do term limits help women candidates? New York could be a new testing ground

        Barbara Rodriguez · January 11
    • From the Collection

      The Impact of Aging

      A number of older people walking down a path of information.
      • From ballroom dancing to bloodshed, the older AAPI community grapples with gun control

        Nadra Nittle, Mariel Padilla · January 27
      • 'I'm planning on working until the day I die': Older women voters are worried about the future

        Mariel Padilla · June 3
      • Climate change is forcing care workers to act as first responders

        Jessica Kutz · May 31
    • From the Collection

      Voting Rights

      A series of hands reaching for ballots.
      • Connecticut voters approved early voting. Here’s how their new secretary of state wants to make it happen.

        Barbara Rodriguez · February 13
      • Women lawmakers in Minnesota are in the vanguard of the democracy movement

        Barbara Rodriguez · February 3
      • Election workers believe in our system — and want everyone else to, too

        Barbara Rodriguez, Jennifer Gerson · November 8

    View all collections

  • Explore by Topic

    • 19th Polling
    • Abortion
    • Business & Economy
    • Caregiving
    • Coronavirus
    • Education
    • Election 2020
    • Election 2022
    • Election 2024
    • Environment & Climate
    • Health
    • Immigration
    • Inside The 19th
    • Justice
    • LGBTQ+
    • Military
    • Politics
    • Press Release
    • Race
    • Sports
    • Technology

    View All Topics

Home
  • Our Mission
  • Our Team
  • Latest Stories
  • Search
  • Upcoming Events
  • Contact Us
  • Newsletter
  • Donate
  • Work With Us
  • Fellowships

We’re an independent, nonprofit newsroom reporting on gender, politics and policy. Read our story.

The 19th Represents Summit

Don’t miss our biggest event of 2023!

Register Today

Become a member

The 19th thanks our sponsors. Become one.

Spelman College
ATLANTA - JULY 18: Spelman College (founded 1881) on July 18, 2015 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo By Raymond Boyd/Getty Images) (Photo By Raymond Boyd/Getty Images)

Education

‘Black women being trailblazers’: Spelman faculty refuse to teach in person as classes begin

Though vaccinations and masks are required on campus, concerns about COVID-19 protocols remain as the Delta variant rages through Georgia.

Orion Rummler

LGBTQ+ Reporter

Orion Rummler headshot

Published

2021-08-19 16:27
4:27
August 19, 2021
pm

Share

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Email

Spelman College’s faculty council, the organizing arm for professors at the influential historically Black women’s college, told students on Thursday morning that they would no longer teach in-person classes, citing a lack of “clear and enforceable” safety guidelines from the school administration, per an email obtained by The 19th. 

Classes at the college began Wednesday. Spelman, located in Atlanta, is one of the first colleges or universities to feel this kind of pressure from faculty this fall after thousands of instructors at American colleges took a similar stand last summer.

“Our professors just don’t think it’s safe yet,” Kaylin Daigle, a junior at Spelman studying political science, told The 19th. She added that a lot of instructors canceled class Wednesday and Thursday, but the schedule for the rest of the week is uncertain, since the administration has not publicly responded to the faculty council.

The 19th thanks our sponsors. Become one.

Two students told The Atlanta Voice that their professors unexpectedly moved their classes online on Thursday.  

The decision from the women-dominated faculty not to teach in-person classes, Daigle said, is another instance of “Black women being trailblazers.” It also comes at a time when people’s physical well-being is at risk, as the COVID-19 Delta variant rages through Georgia.

According to the college’s COVID-19 faculty guidance, all faculty, staff and students were required to get vaccinated for the fall semester and must wear face masks on all campus spaces. 

The guide does not detail how the college plans to enforce vaccinations or mask wearing, and notes that unvaccinated students and staff should receive a COVID test at least once every seven days. 

Stories by experienced reporters you can trust and relate to.

Delivered directly to your inbox every weekday.

Please check your email to confirm your subscription!

Submitting…

Uh-oh! Something went wrong. Please try again later.

The faculty council did not return multiple requests for comment. In an emailed statement, the college said it welcomes faculty input, will continue to monitor COVID-19 spread around Atlanta and Fulton County, and that the school “remains open for in-person instruction.” 

Daigle noted that the professors’ action shouldn’t be considered a strike, since faculty didn’t say they would not work at all. She added that although the faculty’s choice to forgo in-person classes will hurt students who face outsized financial burdens (and who moved or took out bigger loans to learn in-person), the situation could have been avoided if the administration had coordinated with faculty earlier or had kept classes virtual.  

“I know that I admire the faculty … and I know that they are being trailblazers for educators around the nation today,” she said. 

“We’re seen as the leaders for HBCUs,” she added.

Jesse Goldberg, a humanities research fellow at Penn State University who focuses on race, social justice and gender, said that they appreciated the courage of the Spelman faculty council to take action. 

“In numerous historical movements, Black women have been at the forefront setting examples for doing the work necessitated by moments of crisis, always at great risk,” they said in a direct message on Twitter. 

  • More from The 19th
    Skyler Mills, 10, left, Kinsey Mills, 2, and their mother Robin Mills, a Mills College alumna, hold up a sign during a rally at Mills College.
  • Women of color felt safe at Mills College. They say its closure could be dangerous for future generations.
  • Meet the first trans women of color to teach at Harvard Law
  • These are the states facing the biggest fights — and risks — over school mask mandates

In many recent coronavirus vaccination campaigns, groundswells to boost voting rights and in collective action taken by essential workers, Black women have been driving forces. 

In education, Black women are also fueling deeper conversations on how educational institutions need to better serve Black students and their families during the pandemic. 

A recent survey of Black educators, parents and students released by the Black Education Research Collective at Columbia’s Teachers College — in which the large majority of respondents were women — found that the pandemic, police brutality and other major events have eroded the Black community’s trust in the education system. 

Black high school students, parents and teachers across several cities in the survey’s focus group described a lack of transparency from school districts as poor during the pandemic, and poor prior to it — deepening community mistrust. 

More survey respondents said that ensuring students have the technology to learn remotely — and improving distance and hybrid learning — should be a higher priority for improving Black education than moving towards in-person learning.

Spelman’s faculty are also asking for more to protect their students amid the pandemic. 

The instructors’ collective action should be a model for how everyone in higher education should respond to the “pandemic’s very real threat [to] the health and lives of our students, ourselves, and the communities in which our institutions are situated,” Goldberg said. 

“I hope more faculty can and will follow Spelman’s example in solidarity,” they said. 

Share

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Email

The 19th Represents Summit

Don’t miss our biggest event of 2023!

Register Today

Become a member

Up Next

Nikole Hannah-Jones speaking at a podium.

Education

‘Build up our own’: Nikole Hannah-Jones on choosing Howard University

In a conversation with The 19th, the creator of the Pulitzer Prize-winning 1619 Project said it was time to “bring my talents home.”

Read the Story

The 19th
The 19th is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt organization. Our stories are free to republish in accordance with these guidelines.

  • Donate
  • Newsletter
  • Events
  • Search
  • Jobs
  • Fellowships
  • Contact Us
  • About Us
  • Community Guidelines
  • Membership
  • Membership FAQ
  • Major Gifts
  • Sponsorship
  • Privacy
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Instagram