Faculty Convocation, Fall 2020
Virtual Convocation
August 24, 2020
Thank you, calvin. Good morning. And welcome back.
It should be no secret that this has been---for all of us---the most unsettling school
year in memory. We operated in a realm of anxious uncertainty---with unprecedented
predicaments confronting us… unfathomable decisions to make…each of which had a series
of cascading consequences. And yet we are fortunate.
Although the pandemic swept away every norm in the academic playbook, and exhausted
all of us to our core, it did not touch the heart and the soul of FIT. Tested like
never before, you---and I mean all of you--- selflessly supported our shaken student
population in their curricular and extracurricular pursuits. And you did it without
any guides or roadmaps.
It was a classic demonstration of the commitment and ingenuity that is part of the
FIT DNA, and I remain grateful to every one of you for your fortitude and dedication.
It was not easy for you or for any of us. Who would have dreamed, just a few short
months ago, that our world would have turned so utterly surreal, and our lives so
utterly and completely upended.
The pandemic has affected every aspect of our lives---professionally and personally.
Those of you with school age children at home particularly know what I mean. We remain
today living with the same uncertainty that has been our companion since March. We
do not know when we will meet again on 27th street and under what circumstances. But
we do know that the pandemic ---and the black lives matter movement---have together
created a sea change in much of higher education, in much of society---and certainly
here at FIT. I will get to that momentarily. But first, I would like to share some
news of the college. As you can imagine, we have had a very busy summer.
Let me start with the loss of Steven Frumkin, who, as you may know, passed away recently,
a victim of COVID-19. As Dean of the Jay and Patty Baker school of business and technology
for eight years, he was that school’s most devoted and enthusiastic champion. He was
a beloved figure on campus---a friend, a mentor and a colleague to many of you---
and a very valuable member of the community he will certainly be missed. You may be
interested in knowing that his children, in collaboration with our foundation, have
established a scholarship fund in his name. I hope to be able to appoint an interim
dean shortly and look forward to making that announcement.
At our annual June Board of Trustees meeting, Liz Peek stepped down as chair after
serving---with great energy and dedication---for eight years. Our new chair is Robin
Burns-McNeill, who has served as vice chair for 8 years and has been a member of our
board for 25 years. Jacqui Lividini will now serve as vice chair. We also have two
new board members: Gabrielle Fialkoff, a public affairs strategist and businesswoman
who served for many years as senior advisor to mayor Bill DeBlasio and established
his office of strategic partnerships. She is also the former owner, President and
CEO of Haskell Jewels. She now leads the GKF Group, a public affairs consulting firm.
Mona Aboelnaga Kannan is an entrepreneur, global investor, and experienced CEO who
is now managing partner of K6 Investments, a private investment firm she founded.
She sits on numerous bank and business boards and is an investment advisor and board
member of the Arab fashion council.
You know, this was really one summer when rest and relaxation had to take a back seat.
For many members of this community, the pace was unrelenting. As we prepared for
the fall 2020 semester, we developed several detailed scenarios, all with the health
and safety of the community as our first consideration. While we initially decided
to open with a hybrid approach, we soon reversed course along with countless other
colleges and universities---and determined instead to go remote at least for our undergraduate
schools.
Our Graduate school will be hybrid with an in-person component in almost all of its
programs. Not surprisingly, our undergraduate students were unhappy with our decision—particularly
those in art and design----and they were not alone. In one survey of more than 3000
college students in the US and Canada, half said that on-line was worse than face-to-face,
16 percent said it was a lot worse, and 80 percent said online simply lacked the engagement---the
important engagement---of in-person classes. None of this is surprising considering
the abrupt circumstances under which faculty worked in the spring. But I think our
students will be pleasantly surprised once they see the results of the workshops offered
by the CET and the office of online learning- that so many faculty attended—all of
them designed to enhance the remote experience.
As Dr. Oliva indicated, there were well over 2000 participants over the spring and
summer. Meanwhile we have invested in new and sophisticated technology resources that
will also significantly improve the remote environment for students.
The it division has worked diligently and creatively this summer not only upgrading
the infrastructure and academic hardware and software you need but has also identified
and delivered new services and equipment.
We have been watching enrollment figures closely throughout these last months, with
concern. At the moment, we seem to be holding steady---by which I mean we have a 5
percent loss in total registration compared to last fall---and that has been our expected
projection all along. The numbers for new students are lower than last year and non-degree
students continue to decline, but the number of continuing students registered is
similar to last year’s count, which is very good news. One never likes to see a decline
in enrollment, but considering the circumstances, and that other SUNY colleges are
experiencing drops of up to 20 percent, I think for now we are doing well. However,
all of the data are not in yet. The tuition payment deadline has been extended so
we will not know our true numbers until later in the week.
The pandemic put many of our innovation and research projects on hold. But the FIT
D-tech lab continues to attract new national and international clients, and in some
ways has become a beacon for post-virus retail, ---particularly in its range of innovative
digital solutions for product presentation. Tomorrow, for instance, the girl scouts
of the USA and FIT will officially announce their collaboration with the launch of
a new collection for girl scouts in grades 6 through 12, their first makeover in two
decades. Designed by three FIT students, the collection is very stylish and very contemporary.
As part of the launch, a shopping destination will be made available on a digital
microsite that made use of the lab’s geodesic dome which is outfitted with 64 cameras
that captured a young teenage model, in all her three-dimensional glory, wearing various
pieces from this collection. The geodesic dome, which is called little Alice, now
resides in the lab. In fact, we are exploring opportunities with the company Lafayette
148 to build a digital avatar of their FIT model---another step in the digital transformation
of the fashion design process.
We have two events coming up in October---both virtual of course--- that I hope you
will note in your calendars— the first is sustainability awareness week. It will
start on the 5th and include a number of opportunities for you to showcase your sustainability
projects. More information will be available in September on the sustainability page
of the college website. Then, starting October 13th, we will hold our annual civility
week—exactly three weeks before election day. We will focus this year on social justice
and conduct numerous workshops on that theme.
As part of our emphasis on social justice, we are also organizing a major virtual
voter registration drive for our students in September and we will offer workshops
on the same topic during civility week. I believe we have an obligation here at FIT
to ensure that every member of our community is registered to vote.
I was quite moved by an essay the great civil rights leader John Lewis wrote just
days before he died this summer. This man, who endured some of the worst physical
assaults one can imagine in his days of non-violent protest, remained true to his
principles till the end. In his essay, he urged readers to vote---because, he wrote,
it is the most powerful nonviolent change agent you have in a democratic society.
and I think many of us believe that we need change.
There is no question but that we are living through a pivotal moment in our country.
It's a moment of -rebalance of white privilege and black progress. The death of George
Floyd touched a chord that reverberated across America…if not the world. His murder
echoed with memories of other men and women of color whose deaths under similar circumstances
preceded his. Only theirs were not filmed on cell phones. And with his death came
historic protests—multiracial protests that are still ongoing---a long overdue reckoning
of the racism embedded in the structure of our society and possibly in the very psyche
of the American DNA.
In her latest book called “caste: the origins of our discontent,” the Pulitzer prize-winning
author Isabel Wilkerson argues that race in America is a system of caste---and compares
it to the caste system in India. “caste is the bones,” she says, “race is the skin.”
And she tells the following story: One day, many years ago, when she was a reporter
for the New York Times, she was writing an article about a stretch of Chicago’s luxury
district called the “miracle mile.”
Ms. Wilkerson, who is black, had scheduled one more interview, and when the man arrived
in the showroom in which she waited, he brushed her aside. He was late for an appointment
with a New York Times reporter, he told her---and didn’t have time for her. When she
told him that she was that reporter, he did not believe her even after she produced
her identification. “caste,” she writes, “is about respect, authority, and assumptions
of competence---who is accorded these and who is not.” Her analogy is complex, and
I will leave it to others to analyze and argue it. And I do not know if we have a
caste system at FIT. But 30 years have gone by since Isabel Wilkerson was ejected
from this man’s showroom in Chicago---and our students, staff and faculty of color
tell us they suffer from similar soul-damaging insults.
You may remember that earlier this year, we began a conversation on campus about our
own experiences with racism at FIT. It was driven by students who were inflamed by
the MFA fashion design show at the start of the year.it was not so much a conversation
as it was a kind of catharsis and confessional---a moment when our students told us,
as candidly as they could, what they experience in their classrooms here at FIT.
They were angry; they were solemn; they were hesitant; they were in tears. They were
in pain. And they all wanted change. It was a sobering and profoundly sad moment
for me personally.
In my many years here, i don’t think i have ever witnessed FIT students as a group,
so energized and determined to have their say---and so heart-wrenchingly honest in
their pain. On the heels of that, the pandemic arrived, but we knew that that dialogue
was far from over---there was much more to learn---much more to hear---and much that
needed repair. And so i scheduled a series of virtual discussion sessions over the
summer for students, faculty and staff ---smaller, more intimate groups—where people
could have their say----and I wish all of you had attended.
We heard about couched but cruel comments, ugly stereotypes, limited expectations,
opportunities denied. I’m not exactly a novice in this universe, but some of the things
I heard took my breath away: a professor describing the eyes of Asian models as ”chinky”
and using the word “chink” during class. Faculty touching or wanting to touch the
hair of African American students. Black staff members afraid to report micro or
macro aggressions, experience having shown them they would not be believed and …everyone
fearful of retaliation. Repeatedly the students told us that they wanted more diversity
in the faculty ranks and among their peers. Interestingly, many of the white faculty
said the same.
The students were demanding change, and like so many across the country who were marching
for justice, they wanted change now.so what is the legacy of this moment? In his remarks
at the democratic convention the other night, Governor Cuomo said, “only a strong
body can fight off the virus.” He was speaking literally as well as metaphorically---referring
to the state of the nation. But that metaphor applies to us as well, I think.
I attended every conversation, every town hall; starting in February and ending just
the other day. I listened intently and found that the community that I thought I knew
…the community that periodically and enthusiastically took on civility campaigns…also
suffered from a virus that allowed debilitating behavior patterns to fester and grow.
I want to believe we have the capacity to grow stronger. I want to believe that we
have the desire to grow stronger.
It is probably too late to change the hearts and minds of those who blindly or knowingly
create unwelcome environments for students of color, who marginalize their African
American peers or staff members---but bad behavior can be changed; it can be called
out if we are willing to call it out; it can suffer consequences if we are willing
to apply them.
We have the power to make those changes. In those summer sessions that i held with
students and faculty and staff, there was, first of all, an abiding affection for
FIT even among those who felt marginalized; and there were others who were just there
to listen and to learn, people of good will who wanted to take a stand…who wanted
to be part of the solution, and some who offered thoughtful, creative ideas well worth
pursuing.
Our students made it clear that they were tired of lip service and so, following the
MFA fashion show, we began to meet with them and developed an ambitious 11 point plan
meant to eliminate the bigotry that was infecting our community. It calls for a range
of actions such as mandatory annual discrimination and unconscious bias training for
faculty, staff and the administration. Training on cultural competency, the creation
of an ombudsperson position to safeguard students against biased treatment. We
will post the 11 points on our website so you can see the direction we will pursue.
But that is just one part of the equation. We have a vested interest in the creative
industries.
We graduate 2000 students every year, and those are the industries in which they earn
their livelihood. Today, through our foundation, we have launched a new initiative
called the social justice collaborative at FIT. Its overarching goal is to change
the corporate and organizational cultures that stand in the way of diversity in the
workplace. FIT is the link between industry and education---we provide the pipeline
of skilled people who fill the workforce and become its leaders.
I believe it is our obligation to transform the cultural competencies in the creative
industries so that people of color will be identified, recruited, placed, mentored
and promoted into the leadership ranks with the same frequency and considerations
as their white counterparts. And so we established this collaborative network and
invited a selected group of leading corporate and non-profit CEO and influencers
in the creative fields to join us in this effort.
Now, as I am sure you have noticed, many companies have taken out ads and established
programs declaring their commitment to social justice in the wake of the George Floyd
murder; it is the cause du jour –some are skeptical and suspect that this new commitment
is just part of a passing moment. That might be the case elsewhere, but if you
had been at our initial meeting, you would have seen a deeply serious, results-oriented
group of senior executives---presidents and CEO’s of companies like PVH, Mary Kaye,
Kering America, Gucci, GIII and Harlem’s fashion row--- discussing their concerns
about their own companies and seeking actionable and measurable strategies for such
things as recruitment, hiring and promotion of minorities. It was a rich conversation
with a real sense of urgency.
We are also developing a series of programs, ranging from a speaker series to a film
festival to an executive education program---all with social justice as the dominating
theme. Plus, we will establish a social justice scholarship fund to fuel all levels
of minority talent in the pipeline. At the heart of these efforts is the promise of
alleviating the impact of systemic racism. Today we have no greater responsibility.
Our students will be the next generation of leaders in companies that will need to
infuse their culture with the recognition that responsible practices are good for
business and that consumers are questioning the corporate commitment to diversity,
equity and inclusion. Companies---and we—need to recognize that cultural competence
is an important element for change within an organization. We have an opportunity
to reap the benefit of diverse voices in leadership roles and to teach and model behavior
that can lead to enhanced productivity and expanded customer loyalty. We can generate
conversations and actions to move these statements from platitudes to actionable behaviors
and beliefs. Our students are watching and evaluating our responses to their interests
and demands.
So, as Calvin said, we have so much work to do. Between the challenges of remote education--
and the repair of our social fabric--- our dance card is full. We all have a role
to play if we want the principles of social justice to take root and thrive. We all
have a role to play if we want to build a legacy that reflects the values, we claim
to cherish values such as equity and inclusion and diversity.
As educators, we often learn from our students, and what I learned over these past
months has been invaluable and reinforces my own determination to wipe out obstacles
to achievement and build an environment that recognizes and celebrates the beauty
of diversity. It is about respect and dignity; it is because silence signals complicity
and it is up to us to make a difference.
In the words of Margaret Mead, “I look forward to our weaving a social fabric in
which each diverse human gift will find a fitting place.” and it is in that spirit
that I welcome you back and wish all of you, wherever you are, good health and a
productive and rewarding academic year.