Tara Conley Awarded Stanford University Race and Technology Fellowship
麻豆传媒在线 professor will develop digital toolkit to support young people鈥檚 advocacy campaigns for racial justice education in public schools
Posted in: Communication and Media, Homepage News, Research
Assistant Professor Tara L. Conley of 麻豆传媒在线鈥檚 School of Communication and Media has been awarded the prestigious Race and Technology Fellowship by Stanford University鈥檚 and .
Conley, a transmedia storytelling professor, is one of 14 scholars to receive the 2021 fellowship, which is awarded to exceptional social sector leaders around the world working on ideas to benefit civil society.
Her project will serve as a catalyst for change in America鈥檚 K-12 schools. Conley will work with students around the country to create Ruby 鈥 a digital toolkit for youth activists and advocates of color to support civic campaigns that push for comprehensive and accurate Black and ethnic studies curricula in public schools nationwide.
Named for Ruby Bridges, the first African-American child in United States history to integrate a white elementary school in the South, the idea for the project was born during interviews Conley conducted with students 鈥 specifically, the Okolo sisters, Nene (19) and Ekene (16) 鈥 from San Diego鈥檚 Poway Unified School District in the spring of 2020.
鈥淲hen I was researching and interviewing the Okolo sisters last year, I was inspired by their passion and tech-savvy approaches to engage the community and force school change at the local level,鈥 says Conley. 鈥淚 quickly learned they were among a growing group of young activists of color across the United States currently taking up the fight for equitable and accurate representation in school curricula.鈥
The goal of Ruby is to address the challenges young activists currently confront as they develop digital advocacy campaigns. Ruby will address this challenge by providing interactive tools and resources that young activists like the Okolo sisters can use, distribute, and build off of to support their efforts for educational reforms in their local school districts.
鈥淭hese young people are in the midst of what I believe to be a paradigm shift in public school education across the U.S.,鈥 says Conley. 鈥淏ut they are also up against powerful institutional forces that are violently resistant to change, especially now, as the worked to condemn educators, journalists and scholars who confront America’s so-called exceptional history.鈥
Tara L. Conley is an interdisciplinary Black feminist scholar, media-maker and writer. Her scholarship centers Black life in the study and exploration of place, media histories and technoculture.
In 2013, she founded to locate and archive feminist discourse by way of tracking Twitter hashtags on the web. In 2015, she produced a short documentary, Brackish, about life in New Orleans after hurricane Katrina. Most recently, her reporting and creative nonfiction essays have appeared in Bloomberg, ZORA magazine, Parents magazine, Courier Newsroom, and in the anthology . She is also the founder of Media Make Change, a media company that specializes in social justice storytelling through media production, strategic communications, curriculum development and research.
鈥淚鈥檓 really excited about the potential impact of this project,鈥 says Conley. 鈥淚 have an amazing group of folks supporting me at Stanford, as well as the opportunity to help build a network of youth activists across the country. Ruby is coming at a moment when there鈥檚 a strong desire from both the institution and community to make a difference. I鈥檓 just really grateful to be part of this work while the stars are aligning.鈥
Learn more about Tara Conley鈥檚 scholarship and multimedia projects by visiting and .