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Nov 22, 2004 - One is the ACS Committee on Professional Training (CPT), which recently held the first in a series of workshops on strategies for incre...
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EDITORS PAGE CHEMICAL & ENGINEERING NEWS 1 1 5 5 - 1 6 t h St.. N.W.. Washington. DC 20036 (202) 872-4600 or 18001 227-5558

Promoting Diversity

E D I T O R - I N - C H I E F : Rudy M Baum M A N A G I N G EDITOR: Pamela S. Zurer ART DIRECTORS: Nathan Becker. Robin L Braverman STAFF ARTIST: Linda Mattingly S E N I O R C O R R E S P O N D E N T : Lois R. Ember NEWS EDITOR: William G. Schulz E D I T O R - A T - L A R G E : Michael Heylin SENIOR ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICER: Marvel A. Wills A D M I N I S T R A T I V E ASSISTANT: Marilyn Caracciolo BUSINESS Michael McCoy. Assistant Managing Editor NORTHEAST: (7321 906-8300. Vivien Marx (Associate Editor). Rick Mullin (Senior Editor). Marc S. Reisch (Senior Correspondent). William J. Storck (Senior Correspondent). Alexander H. Tullo (Associate Editor). Rachel Eskenazi (Administrative Assistant). HONG KONG: 852 2984 9072. Jean-François Tremblay (Bureau Head). LONDON: UU 20 8870 6884. Patricia L. Short (Senior Correspondent) G O V E R N M E N T & POLICY David J Hanson. Assistant Managing Editor WASHINGTON: (202) 872-4495. Bette Hileman (Senior Editor). Cheryl Hogue (Senior Editor). Jeffrey W. Johnson (Senior Editor). Susan R. Morrissey (Associate Editor) SCIENCE/TECHNOLOGY/EDUCATION Doron Dagani. Assistant Managing Editor A. Maureen Rouhi. Deputy Assistant Managing Editor WASHINGTON: (202) 872-6216. Stuart A. Borman (Senior Correspondent). Louisa W. Dalton (Assistant Editor). Bethany Halford (Assistant Editor). Celia M. Henry (Associate Editor). Stephen K. Ritter (Senior Editor). Sophie L. Rovner (Senior Editor). Amanda T. Yarnell (Associate Editor) CHICAGO: (847)679-1156. Mitch Jacoby (Senior Editor). WEST COAST: (510) 849-0575. Elizabeth Κ Wilson (Senior Editor). LONDON: 44 1256 811052. Michael Freemantle (Senior Correspondent) ACS N E W S & S P E C I A L FEATURES Linda Raber. Assistant Managing Editor Victoria M Gilman (Assistant Editor). Corinne A. Marasco (Associate Editor). Aalok Mehta (Assistant Editor) EDITING & PRODUCTION Robin M. Giroux. Assistant Managing Editor Melissa A. Braddock (Assistant Editor). Janet S. Dodd (Senior Editor). Arlene Goldberg-Gist (Senior Editor). Deanna Miller (Associate Editor). Stephen M. Trzaska (Associate Editor). Linda Wang (Assistant Editor) C&EN ONLINE Melody Voith. Editor Luis A. Carnllo (Production Manager). Wes M. Lmdamood (Production Associate). Rachel Sheremeta Pepling (Associate Editor) PRODUCTION & IMAGING Krystal E. King (Senior Digital Production Associate) SALES & M A R K E T I N G Elise Swinehart. Senior Marketing Manager ADVISORY BOARD Paul S. Anderson. Shenda M. Baker. Donna G. Blackmond. Stephanie A. Burns. Alison Butler. Joe Carleone. Sibnna N. Collins. Terry Collins. Thomas M. Connelly Jr.. F. Fleming C n m . Thomas E. D'Ambra. Richard M. Gross. Rudolf Hanko. L. Louis Hegedus. Nancy B. Jackson. Fran Keeth. Sunil Kumar. Robert L. Lichter, Charles M. Lieber. Joseph A. Loo. Peter Nagler. Peter Pollak. Lura J. Powell. Patrick Prévost. Géraldine L. Richmond. Gregory H. Robinson. Michael E. Rogers. Jay M. Short. Joel Tickner. Sergey A. Vasnetsov. Guy Villax Published by the AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY Madeleine Jacobs. Executive Director Robert D. Bovenschulte. President. Publications Division E D I T O R I A L BOARD Theodore L. Brown (Chair); ACS Board of Directors Chair: James D. Burke; ACS President: Charles P. Casey; Ned D. Heindel. Peter C. Jurs. Eisa Reichmanis. Peter J. Stang Copyright 2004. American Chemical Society Canadian GST Reg. No. R127571347

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cused on the increasingly multidisciplinaiy nature of scientific research and the effect of that trend on chemistry I have noted that the ACS Strategic Plan for 2 0 0 4 - 0 6 explicitly addresses this issue. Another issue confronting the chemical enterprise that is addressed by the ACS Strategic Plan is the need to promote inclusiveness in our profession. The plan states that ACS "will advance inclusiveness and diversity in the profession of chemistry and within the Society such that the membership and leadership demographics ofACS more closely parallel that of society in general." Many elements of ACS are engaged in addressing this challenging objective. One is the ACS Committee on Professional Training (CPT), which recently held the first in a series of workshops on strategies for increasing both participation of underrepresented minority undergraduate students in chemistry and the number of ACS-approved undergraduate programs at mmority-serving institutions. The workshop was organized by University of Arizona chemistry professor Jeanne E. Pemberton, a former chair of C P T and currently a consultant to the committee. CPT identified a number of historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs) and several institutions that serve a large African Americanundergraduate population for participation in the workshop. Among them were Alcorn State University Chicago State University Claflin University Clark-Atlanta University, Fisk University, Florida A&M University, Hampton University Howard University Jackson State University Morehouse College, Morgan State University Norfolk State University North Carolina Central University Prairie View A&M University Savannah State University Southern University and A&M College, Spelman College, Texas Southern University, and Tiiskegee University Representatives ofthese colleges and universities, members of CPT and other units of ACS governance, representatives from other interested institutions, and ACS staff met over a weekend at the ACS headquarters. In her introductory comments, Pemberton outlined the goals of the workshop: • To discuss challenges associated with the recruitment and retention of African American undergraduate students in chemistry and what ACS in general, and

CPT specifically, might do to improve the profession's performance in this area. • T o better educate C P T about the current state of chemistry departments at institutions with large African American undergraduate student populations. • T o devise a strategy for identifying and disseminating practices that work in developing strong chemistry programs that educate significant numbers of African American students. Joseph Francisco, a chemistry professor at Purdue University and a member of C P T who was also involved in organizing the workshop, outlined the scope of the problem. At the 50 top research universities, only 18 of 1,638 chemistry faculty are African American. Of those 18, only 13 are native born. Francisco also made clear in his presentation that HBCUs are doing something right when it comes to developing African American chemists. Over the past five years at Purdue, three African American graduate students came from major research universities, while 29 came from HBCUs. The same is true at most of the other top chemistry Ph.D.-producing universities, Francisco said. C P T Chair F. Fleming Crim, a chemistry professor at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, says the workshop was successful on a number of levels. CPT is responsible for evaluating university undergraduate chemistry degree programs and for granting ACS approval to programs that meet the committee's rigorous standards. Crim says the workshop helped educate C P T on the challenges HBCUs and other rnmority-serving institutions face in receiving ACS approval for their programs. The workshop also helped make clear the value ofACS approval of a chemistry program at a minority-serving institution. On the larger issue of howto mount more effective chemistry programs at HBCUs and other rnmority-serving institutions and to attract more African American students to study chemistry the workshop is but a single step in a challenging process. ACS and the National Organization for the Professional Advancement of Black Chemists & Chemical Engineers are forging a close working relationship to meet this challenge. Thanks for reading.

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