Ken Hardy leads a faculty and staff training

Kenneth Hardy leads a faculty and staff training (photo by Caitlin Cunningham)

In March, the md传媒国产剧 College School of Social Work (BCSSW) hosted a series of five workshops for students, faculty, and staff to facilitate conversations on race. Intended to lay the foundation for ongoing conversations about equity, justice, and inclusion, the sessions fostered candid discussions and skills training to advance these values, a key strategic aim for the school.

More than 150 members of the BCSSW community participated in the workshops, led by acclaimed clinician, author, and trainer , PhD, professor at Drexel University鈥檚 College of Nursing and Health Professions and director of the Eikenberg Institute for Relationships in New York City. The workshops, titled 鈥淭ips and Tactics for Talking about Race: A Toolkit for Social Workers in the New Millennium,鈥 were designed to consider diversity鈥攁cknowledging and finding ways to appreciate differences鈥攁nd social justice鈥攔ecognizing that some voices are louder than others, that some people have greater access to power than others, and determining how to alter that, both in the classroom and in practice.

Hardy opened each session with four observations about race that served as launch points for discussion. The first is that race is a powerful organizing principle in our society. 鈥淭here is no behavior that we participate in that is not, in some way, shaped by race,鈥 he says. Second, there is an ambivalent relationship regarding race in the U.S. 鈥淚t is deeply significant, yet we deny that significance,鈥 he explains. 鈥淲e also have difficulty discussing it, which exacerbates the awkwardness around such discussions.鈥 Third, he discussed racial socialization鈥攈ow we define ourselves and how we navigate race. 鈥淧eople of color have reported an explicit awareness of their race as early as age three, while white people report that awareness as occurring implicitly, and as late as in their 20s and early 30s,鈥 he says.

When we think of racial issues as outside of ourselves, it鈥檚 much harder to have meaningful, progressive conversations. It鈥檚 a deeper presence when we consider how it acts out in our lives; when we engage in self-reflection and self-interrogation.
Kenneth Hardy

Finally, Hardy explored the difference between racial awareness (our knowledge and cognitive processes about race) and racial sensitivity (an affective intuition borne out of experience). 鈥淎wareness can be achieved by reading a book or watching a video,鈥 says Hardy. 鈥淏ut you don鈥檛 have to dig and search within your insides. Your narratives aren鈥檛 put to the test. It鈥檚 possible to be highly racially aware and highly racially insensitive. And the goal is always to move us towards racial sensitivity.鈥 This often can鈥檛 occur unless one is willing to challenge their own racial assumptions by interacting with and being challenged by others over deeply held beliefs.

At each of the five daylong workshops, Hardy guided participants through conversations and exercises to do just that: deeply engage in the very difficult, painful, and at times uncomfortable process of exposing the roots and perceptions of racism. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 what this work really involves,鈥 he says.

Ken Hardy leads the student training

Hardy leads a student session

He explained that an inherent drive toward action, the 鈥渄oing,鈥 which is often amplified in the social work field, can miss crucial steps. According to Hardy, time spent on 鈥渟eeing鈥 and 鈥渂eing鈥 must come first. 鈥淪eeing is about how we begin to engage in processes that sharpen our visual acuity to see all the subtle ways in which race is seamlessly integrated into everything we do,鈥 says Hardy. 鈥淏eing is a process of self-interrogation. It鈥檚 hard to have conversations about race that are meaningful and progressive and sustainable if we have not spent time thinking about who we are racially and where our biases come from.鈥

Throughout each six-hour session, participants disclosed their racial identities and experiences, and discussed ways in which they have experienced and participated in bias. One white woman shared that white privilege had opened doors for her to educational and career opportunities. A black woman shared her experiences of being racially profiled at work; a white man spoke of his boyhood friendship with his black schoolmate, which was kept secret from their disapproving families; a Latino spoke of his exhaustion from studying in predominantly white spaces and feeling pressure to represent his culture at all times.

Hardy encouraged participants to share their feelings鈥攏ot just their thoughts鈥攚hile speaking and listening; to be open to the vulnerability that arises from discussing these deeply complex topics of race, power, and oppression. 鈥淣on-engagement is what we do all the time,鈥 he says. 鈥淟et鈥檚 allow the needle to rest for a while on race, and take the risk of talking about it. When we think of racial issues as outside of ourselves, it鈥檚 much harder to have meaningful, progressive conversations. It鈥檚 a deeper presence when we consider how it acts out in our lives; when we engage in self-reflection and self-interrogation.鈥

Additional topics probed in Hardy鈥檚 sessions included the notions of a preferential hierarchy of skin color; the definition and promulgation of white supremacy; how unearned privilege paves the way for earned privilege; how academia is addressing racist incidents on campus; and how race influences the field and practice of social work.

Hardy thanked participants for their hard work as he wrapped up one session. 鈥淭hese are important, hard, painful conversations,鈥 he says. 鈥淢any times, when we have conversations about race in our society they are relatively superficial, highly guarded, and we approach them with enormous trepidation.鈥 Stepping out of one鈥檚 comfort zone, explains Hardy, is the first step in promoting a deeper and more progressive conversation.


Postscript: Hardy returned to BCSSW in May to follow-up with those who attended the initial workshops. A small group of faculty and staff are working on how to sustain trainings for new students, faculty, and staff, including the lessons learned from the Hardy sessions, to continue to advance BCSSW鈥檚 strategic direction on equity, justice, and inclusion, which endeavors to build a caring, respectful, and inclusive community that prospers and flourishes because of diversity.