Announcing our First Cohort of Hispanic Serving Institution Scholars on the Pathway to the Professoriate
Philadelphia, Pa., Feb. 2, 2017—The Penn Center for Minority Serving Institutions (CMSI) has named the first 30 scholars that will receive unprecedented support and mentoring as part of a program to increase the number of Hispanic professors working in the humanities at U.S. colleges and universities.
The undergraduate students selected for HSI Pathways to the Professoriate, a program supported with a $5.1 million grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, attend one of three Hispanic Serving Institutions (HSIs).
Beginning this summer, these HSI Pathways Fellows will take part in intensive summer research programs and cross-institutional conferences, while also receiving mentoring and support for applying to and enrolling in graduate school.
The program kicks off as colleges and universities across the United States are trying, and often struggling, to develop a faculty that reflects the nation’s growing ethnic and cultural diversity. The scarcity of Latino professors is especially stark, as Latinos make up only 4.1 percent of the professoriate in the United States, but 20 percent of the population aged 18-44.
“We aren’t doing enough to diversify the professoriate—either through recruitment or retention—and the fact is that we have the tools available to us, we just need the will,” said Marybeth Gasman, Penn professor and director of CMSI. “With HSI Pathways, we are showing that we have the will and role modeling that should be taking place throughout the nation. No excuses.”
During the five-year program, CMSI will partner with three HSIs—Florida International University; the University of Texas El Paso; and California State University, Northridge—and five majority research institutions—New York University; University of California, Berkeley; University of Pennsylvania; Northwestern University; and University of California, Davis. Faculty from these majority institutions will be featured at summer sessions and cross-institutional conferences. They will also offer fellows advice and support as they apply to graduate school.
2017 HSI Pathways Fellows
California State University, Northridge
- Shawntel Barreiro
- Elizabeth Calzada
- Jared Diaz
- Elizabeth Hernandez
- Gema Ludisaca
- Carla Martinez
- Brian Mercado
- Yaquelin Morales
- Hermes Rocha
- Eryn Talevich
Florida International University
- Maria Ahumada
- Gabriela Diaz
- Jason Fontana
- Michael Garcia
- Amanda Gonzalez
- Stephanie Janania
- Francisco Lopez
- Faraji Miller
- Janie Raghundan
- Valeria Salerno
University of Texas at El Paso
- Carla Aldrete
- Star Flagel
- Jasmin Flores
- Nerea Hernandez
- Victor Hurtado
- Johanna Lopez
- Alejandra Lozano
- Lyandra Sanchez
- Mario Sanchez
- Elizabeth Vigil
About the Penn Center for Minority Serving Institutions
The Penn Center for Minority Serving Institutions (CMSI) brings together researchers and practitioners from Historically Black Colleges and Universities, Tribal Colleges and Universities, Hispanic Serving Institutions, and Asian American, Native American, and Pacific Islander Serving Institutions. CMSI’s goals include: elevating the educational contributions of MSIs; ensuring that they are a part of national conversations; bringing awareness to the vital role MSIs play in the nation’s economic development; increasing the rigorous scholarship of MSIs; connecting MSIs’ academic and administrative leadership to promote reform initiatives; and strengthening efforts to close educational achievement gaps among disadvantaged communities. The Penn Center for Minority Serving Institutions is part of the Graduate School of Education at the University of Pennsylvania. For further information about CMSI, please visit www.gse.upenn.edu/cmsi.
About the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
Founded in 1969, the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation endeavors to strengthen, promote, and, where necessary, defend the contributions of the humanities and the arts to human flourishing and to the well-being of diverse and democratic societies by supporting exemplary institutions of higher education and culture as they renew and provide access to an invaluable heritage of ambitious, path-breaking work. For more information, please visit https://mellon.org.