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UC Santa Cruz Creates New Chair to Bolster Diversity in Astronomy

UC Santa Cruz Creates New Chair to Bolster Diversity in Astronomy

“to attract and train new astronomers from all walks of life”

Diversity in higher education will eventually be a bigger priority than science.

Campus Reform reports:

College’s ‘diversity in astronomy’ push is out of this world

The University of California Santa Cruz announced a $1.5 million privately-funded endowment for a new chair position created to bolster “diversity in astronomy,” with another $500,000 contributed to the program by the university.

The Vera Rubin Presidential Chair for Diversity in Astronomy “was created to advance the cause of diversity, equity, and inclusive excellence in astronomy,” UC Santa Cruz said. The chair bears the name of late astronomer Vera Rubin, whom the school describes as “a champion of inclusivity in science.”

The chair will be expected to “embody the spirit of diversity in one of a variety of ways, such as their proven ability to attract and train new astronomers from all walks of life.”

The position “will be a bridge of support across cultural, ethnic, and economic hurdles to engage the brightest minds in astronomy,” UC Santa Cruz professor and chair of the Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics Enrico Ramirez-Ruiz said.

UC Santa Cruz points out that, even before the creation of such a position, women made up half of its astronomy Ph.D. students for more than a decade. Nearly a third of the school’s graduate students are historically underrepresented identities. UC Santa Cruz boasts that its astronomy and astrophysics department’s six female professors make up “the largest tenured cohort of female astronomers in the nation.”

A large portion of the funding for the chair position was gifted by UC Santa Cruz professor emerita of astronomy and astrophysics Sandra Faber and her husband Andrew Faber. The couple launched the campaign to create the chair with their initial gift of $250,000. The university reported that it contributed $500,000, in addition to contributions gifted by the Heising-Simons Foundation and other private donors.

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Comments

The Friendly Grizzly | September 12, 2018 at 2:22 pm

Anything to do with black holes?

Dark Matter Lives

They should at least be honest in their announcement of the open position: “White males need not apply.”

Oh if only Steven Hawking were still with us so he could apply.