Search Criteria

 






Key Word Search by:









Organization Type


State or Jurisdiction


Congressional District





help

Division or Office
help

Grants to:


2019


2024


  • Special Searches




    Product Type


    Media Coverage Type








 


Search Results

Grant program: Humanities Initiatives at Historically Black Colleges and Universities
Date range: 2019-2024

Permalink for this Search

1
Page size:
 15 items in 1 pages
Award Number Grant ProgramAward RecipientProject TitleAward PeriodApproved Award Total
1
Page size:
 15 items in 1 pages
AB-264042-19Education Programs: Humanities Initiatives at Historically Black Colleges and UniversitiesTuskegee UniversityLiterary Legacies of Macon County and Tuskegee Institute: Zora Neale Hurston, Ralph Ellison, and Albert Murray1/1/2019 - 9/30/2021$99,381.00AdakuTawiaAnkumahRhondaMichelleCollierTuskegee UniversityTuskegeeAL36088-1923USA2018American LiteratureHumanities Initiatives at Historically Black Colleges and UniversitiesEducation Programs99381098750.770

A two-year project to produce new curricular materials, digital humanities resources, and community engagement activities focused on the writers Zora Neale Hurston, Ralph Ellison, and Albert Murray.

The proposed project seeks to advance humanities education and scholarship at Tuskegee University as our students become acquainted with literary and cultural icons Zora Neale Hurston, Ralph Ellison, and Albert Murray, each of whom was connected biographically and artistically to Tuskegee Institute and Macon County, Alabama. In studying the works of these pre-eminent authors of the twentieth century, engaging with scholars knowledgeable about these authors, our students, mainly in the sciences and social sciences, will be able to understand and contextualize twenty-first century challenges in culture and society. The project, through course enhancements, workshops for teachers and faculty, and community engagement activities, also seeks to create a digital humanities site to disseminate and historical documents, teaching materials, and cultural artifacts and to preserve them for future generations.

AB-264116-19Education Programs: Humanities Initiatives at Historically Black Colleges and UniversitiesSpelman CollegeThe SIS Oral History Project: Transformative Teaching and Learning in the Humanities1/1/2019 - 12/31/2021$99,916.00GloriaWadeGayles   Spelman CollegeAtlantaGA30314-4399USA2018Interdisciplinary Studies, OtherHumanities Initiatives at Historically Black Colleges and UniversitiesEducation Programs99916068510.410

Curricular improvements to an oral history course focused on African American women from the rural and small-town South, as well as archival preservation of interviews with these community elders.

In August of 2002, students at Spelman College were introduced to The SIS Oral History Project, a new course that would: (1) open the lens of age in studies of history and literature; (2) identify oral history as a major methodology for research in the humanities; and (3), through student-conducted interviews, give voice and visibility to African American women elders of the South. That “new course” is, today, a demanding project that transforms teaching and learning in the humanities. The project meets criteria for NEH funding for Humanities Initiatives at HBCUs in the following ways: (1) it strengthens students’ skills in writing, critical thinking, oral articulation, and research across disciplines; (2) through a partnership with AUC Robert W. Woodruff Library Archives Research Center, it insures that project research will be preserved and disseminated for use in humanities courses across the nation; and (3) it produces age-conscious scholars for the twenty-first century.

AB-264248-19Education Programs: Humanities Initiatives at Historically Black Colleges and UniversitiesVirginia State UniversityRe-visioning Virginia Foremothers through their Lives and Legacies1/1/2019 - 6/30/2022$99,307.00MerryLynnByrd   Virginia State UniversityPetersburgVA23803-2520USA2018Literature, GeneralHumanities Initiatives at Historically Black Colleges and UniversitiesEducation Programs99307080645.340

A three-year program of faculty development, curriculum enhancement, and community engagement focused on eight important Virginia women from the colonial era into the twentieth century.

This literature and history based program will provide faculty enrichment and course development opportunities as well as a bridge immersion program for honors students as we study the lives, legacies, and textual representations of eight Virginians from colonial times to the twentieth century.

AB-264285-19Education Programs: Humanities Initiatives at Historically Black Colleges and UniversitiesHoward UniversityReviving the Bethel Literary and Historical Association in the 21st Century1/1/2019 - 12/31/2021$100,000.00DanaA.WilliamsElsie ScottHoward UniversityWashingtonDC20059-0001USA2018African American StudiesHumanities Initiatives at Historically Black Colleges and UniversitiesEducation Programs100000068770.220

A project to digitize the archives of an important early African American literary and cultural society and to carry forward its legacy through interdisciplinary public lectures and forums.

Collaborating with the Howard University Moorland-Spingarn Research Center (MSRC) and Metropolitan African Methodist Episcopal Church (MAME), the Department of English at Howard University requests funds to support “Bethel 21,” a project that revives and reimagines the Bethel Literary and Historical Association in the 21st century. Like the original society, this project will consist of lectures from scholars and public figures and literary and cultural arts presentations from authors and performers. This iteration of the Bethel, however, as a collaborative project in the humanities between a historical society and a university, will also include critical engagement with the archives of the Bethel Literary and Historical Association’s collection at MRSC and will organize public forums for the community to promote civil, civic discourse as a life skill.

AB-269178-20Education Programs: Humanities Initiatives at Historically Black Colleges and UniversitiesTuskegee UniversityMaking an Institute: Tuskegee University Virtual Campus Tour2/1/2020 - 1/31/2022$99,921.00Worth HayesJohnRandolphTilghmanTuskegee UniversityTuskegeeAL36088-1923USA2019U.S. HistoryHumanities Initiatives at Historically Black Colleges and UniversitiesEducation Programs99921071765.40

A two-year project to create a digital interactive map of Tuskegee University’s historic campus that would be incorporated into courses at Tuskegee and nearby high schools.

Tuskegee University proposes a project, with assistance from the National Endowment for the Humanities, to develop a web based historic interactive map of Tuskegee’s campus for the purpose of research and pedagogy.

AB-269212-20Education Programs: Humanities Initiatives at Historically Black Colleges and UniversitiesGrambling State UniversityCreating an Interdisciplinary Minor in Digital Humanities2/1/2020 - 1/31/2023$92,919.00JamesM.ClawsonEdwardLawrenceHoltGrambling State UniversityGramblingLA71245-2715USA2019Interdisciplinary Studies, OtherHumanities Initiatives at Historically Black Colleges and UniversitiesEducation Programs92919074226.340

A three-year curriculum development project that would create a new interdisciplinary minor in digital humanities.

Grambling State University's departments of English and History will design and implement a new interdisciplinary minor in Digital Humanities. Grant funding will go toward bringing outside expertise onto campus to train humanities faculty in interdisciplinary techniques and in pedagogy appropriate to the Digital Humanities during planning stages for the minor.

AB-277598-21Education Programs: Humanities Initiatives at Historically Black Colleges and UniversitiesHampton UniversityBlack History Matters: Documenting the Legacy of Charles H. Williams on the Campus of Hampton University2/1/2021 - 3/31/2024$149,267.00RonaldJ.KlosterBeverlyCordovaDuaneHampton UniversityHamptonVA23668-0108USA2020African American StudiesHumanities Initiatives at Historically Black Colleges and UniversitiesEducation Programs14926701171980

A two-year initiative to create teaching and archival resources about dance and campus architectural history and to integrate them into the university curriculum.

The “Black History Matters” Architecture and Dance initiative seeks to promote the humanities at Hampton University by creating a digital teaching resource for three programs – the Pre-College/Summer Bridge program, University 101 and ARC314. Inspired by the research conducted by Dr. Mary Ann Laverty in her book, “Charles H. Williams and the Hampton Institute Creative Dance Group and Their Use of African Diasporic Dance 1934-1948,” this resource will provide archival information on dance and campus architectural history at Hampton University during Charles H. Williams’ tenure and its significance to broader issues of race and inclusion at that time.

AB-277734-21Education Programs: Humanities Initiatives at Historically Black Colleges and UniversitiesSouthern University at New OrleansPontchartrain Park Pioneers: An Oral History of New Orleans’ Civil Rights Era Segregated Black “Suburb in the City”2/1/2021 - 8/31/2022$46,150.00Clyde Robertson   Southern University at New OrleansNew OrleansLA70126-0002USA2020African American HistoryHumanities Initiatives at Historically Black Colleges and UniversitiesEducation Programs46150039230.520

A one-year curriculum development project integrating local oral histories into six humanities courses.

This project utilizes oral histories of New Orleans African Americans who achieved the “American Dream” of homeownership in the second oldest American all-black “suburb in the city” in the 1950s and early 1960s and the first in New Orleans to tell a larger story. Denied by “redlining” from buying homes in the rest of the city, they formed their own community. The project strengthens the teaching and study of the humanities at SUNO by developing new resources in the form of these oral histories, creating a digital Teaching Module for sharing them in humanities courses, teaching them in humanities courses, and preserving them digitally.

AB-284546-22Education Programs: Humanities Initiatives at Historically Black Colleges and UniversitiesOakwood University"That Dreded Life" Living Museum2/1/2022 - 7/31/2023$129,366.00Denise Shaver   Oakwood UniversityHuntsvilleAL35896-0001USA2021African American HistoryHumanities Initiatives at Historically Black Colleges and UniversitiesEducation Programs12936601293660

A one-year project creating a living history museum based on the life of Dred Scott.

The project entails creating a plantation Living Museum on a Historically Black College and University based on the life of Dred Scott. This would result in the revision of a course and engage and educate the campus and larger community.

AB-284570-22Education Programs: Humanities Initiatives at Historically Black Colleges and UniversitiesNorth Carolina Central UniversityDigital Exploration of North Carolina Central University's History6/1/2022 - 12/31/2024$98,420.00RachelleSuzanneGold   North Carolina Central UniversityDurhamNC27707-3129USA2021African American HistoryHumanities Initiatives at Historically Black Colleges and UniversitiesEducation Programs984200891100

A two-year project organizing digital humanities workshops for faculty to incorporate digitized materials about campus history.

Faculty and staff from Humanities disciplines within the College of Arts, Social Sciences, and Humanities at North Carolina Central University will form a cohort to participate in a two-year project (2022-2024) that uses the NCCU materials at Digital NC (especially the newspapers and yearbooks) and the materials in the NCCU Archives to develop teaching materials to be implemented in their courses. In the first year, we will coordinate with the Digital Humanities Research Institute at CUNY for workshop materials and instructors who would be willing to run a week of workshops. After the workshop, faculty members will be expected to create and implement course modules using this digital archival material. In the second year, faculty members will participate in a symposium discussing their results and will engage with other faculty members in their disciplines as well as the greater university community and the citizens of Durham, NC.

AB-284640-22Education Programs: Humanities Initiatives at Historically Black Colleges and UniversitiesHoward UniversityDeveloping an Interdisciplinary Studies Graduate Certificate in Digital Humanities2/1/2022 - 1/31/2024$149,996.00DanaA.WilliamsJimisha RelerfordHoward UniversityWashingtonDC20059-0001USA2021African American StudiesHumanities Initiatives at Historically Black Colleges and UniversitiesEducation Programs14999601485590

A two-year project to create a digital humanities graduate certificate.

The proposed project will create an Interdisciplinary Studies Graduate Certificate in Digital Humanities at Howard University.

AB-290067-23Education Programs: Humanities Initiatives at Historically Black Colleges and UniversitiesHoward UniversityExploring the Dimension of Russia and Otherness5/1/2023 - 4/30/2025$150,000.00Brunilda Lugo de FabritzKelly Knickmeier-CummingsHoward UniversityWashingtonDC20059-0001USA2022Interdisciplinary Studies, OtherHumanities Initiatives at Historically Black Colleges and UniversitiesEducation Programs15000001500000

A two-year project to develop an open educational resource textbook that would examine Black intellectuals’ engagement with Russian/Soviet intellectuals and the cultures of the Soviet Union.

The project “Exploring the Dimension of Russia and Otherness” will focus on an underexamined aspect of Russian, East European, and Eurasian Studies (REEES): how African Americans and Black intellectuals have interpreted their encounters with Russian/Soviet intellectuals, and how Russian/Soviet intellectuals have interpreted their encounters with African Americans and Black intellectuals and their culture(s), to include cultural exchanges with national minority cultures of the former Soviet Union and Russia’s near abroad.

AB-295684-24Education Programs: Humanities Initiatives at Historically Black Colleges and UniversitiesSouth Carolina State UniversityDeveloping an Asynchronous Online MA in English3/1/2024 - 2/28/2027$145,877.00Janice HawesThomasJ.CassidySouth Carolina State UniversityOrangeburgSC29115-4427USA2023Literature, GeneralHumanities Initiatives at Historically Black Colleges and UniversitiesEducation Programs14587701458770

A three-year project to develop a 30-credit online asynchronous graduate program in English.

The English Program at SC State proposes to develop an online, asynchronous M.A. in English Program with a focus on Intersectional Studies, a framework with the goal of understanding how aspects of individual identity (which can include but are not limited to race, class, gender, sexuality, disability, and religion) intersect to construct different degrees of power and powerlessness. This graduate program will be part of the continuing initiatives in the English Program for outreach to adult learners interested in the Humanities and for development of more programs in Intersectional Studies.

AB-295751-24Education Programs: Humanities Initiatives at Historically Black Colleges and UniversitiesPrairie View A & M UniversityDeepening African American Studies Curriculum and Faculty Development8/1/2024 - 7/31/2026$150,000.00Jeanelle HopeMarco RobinsonPrairie View A & M UniversityPrairie ViewTX77445-6850USA2023Social Sciences, GeneralHumanities Initiatives at Historically Black Colleges and UniversitiesEducation Programs15000001500000

A two-year project to develop faculty, curriculum, and other resources for a humanities-centered African American studies program.

Prairie View A&M University, a federally designated Historically Black College and University (HBCU), seeks funding from the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) for faculty enrichment and curriculum development to bolster support for the university’s newly launched African American studies program.

AB-295805-24Education Programs: Humanities Initiatives at Historically Black Colleges and UniversitiesMorgan State UniversityBuried Blueprints of Black Education2/1/2024 - 1/31/2026$150,000.00Gretchen RudhamKendrick Kenney IIMorgan State UniversityBaltimoreMD21251-0001USA2023African American StudiesHumanities Initiatives at Historically Black Colleges and UniversitiesEducation Programs15000001500000

A two-year curriculum development project focused on the histories of Black education in the United States.

Buried Blueprints will illuminate the unknown, or often invisible, contributions of Black educators as founders of pedagogy and practice of Black education in America from the Colonial period to Civil Rights era. This Humanities Initiative illuminates the legacies of founding Black educators missing from curriculum and classrooms. This initiative aims to deconstruct oversimplified stories and caricatures of a few exceptional Black educators, and reconstruct a more full rendering of the beliefs, philosophies, practices, influences, curriculum, challenges, and insights—of the blueprints they left behind. As a recovery project for erased knowledge, Buried Blueprints offers a more complete story of the widespread efforts of many Black people, reframing Black architects of education from exceptions to the norm. This project will sync two new courses: Buried Blueprints of Black Education and Digital Storytelling as Curriculum, disseminating the courses at 25 partnering HBCUs.