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UWSP project honored with diversity award

A reading program created by an English professor at the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point has been honored by the State Council on Affirmative Action for its promotion of diversity.

The “Literature Circles Diversity Collaboration,” created by Professor Barbara Dixson, won the 2008 Ann Lydecker Educational Diversity Award. The program promotes cultural awareness and literacy through a collaboration between students in Dixson’s “Reading for the English Teacher” course and students at Milwaukee’s Vincent High School and Adams-Friendship High School. The course has been offered over the last two spring semesters, funded through a University Personnel Development Committee Grant.

Dixson was presented with the award today at the State Capitol’s Senate Parlor in Madison. The award is named for the late Ann Lydecker, who died in 2004 while serving as chancellor of UW-River Falls.

Throughout Dixson’s course, her UWSP students have e-mail discussions and visit students at the high schools, one urban and the other rural, to encourage reading and analysis of several novels about race issues. Assisting with the project are two UWSP alumni who teach at the high schools – Tony Wacker at Vincent and Erica Ringelspaugh at Adams-Friendship.

After mentoring the high school students for several months, Dixson’s UWSP students invite them to UWSP for a day of college life. The high school students meet with each other and share book discussions, lunch and a tour of campus.

Dixson says that everyone who participates in the program, from herself and her students to the high school students and their teachers, has grown from the experience.

“Almost universally in their end-of-program evaluations, the students comment that they have discovered that the students of the other group and of the other race are people just like them, with similar problems, concerns and interests,” says Dixson. “While from different backgrounds, the students really connect and become friends.”

“Dr. Dixson’s program creates opportunities for students of all ages and races to collaborate, explore complicated literary ideas and gain the skills necessary to succeed in an increasingly diverse world,” said UWSP Chancellor Linda Bunnell.