Ohio State’s Dorian Harrision Wins Award From the National Council of Teachers of English

Dorian Harrison,  an assistant professor of language and literacy at Ohio State University at Newark, received the Early Career Educator of Color Leadership Award from the National Council of Teachers of English.

Dr. Harrison’s research focuses on issues of identity and power in literacy education, paying particular attention to how race, class, and language impact teaching and learning. Through in-depth analyses of teaching and learning communities, Harrison’s work seeks to challenge deficit views of diverse students and promote the need for culturally and linguistically diverse texts.

Dr. Harrison joined the faculty at Ohio State University in 2019 after teaching at Belmont University in Nashville. Earlier she taught elementary school in Tennessee.

Dr. Harrison is a graduate of the University of Memphis, where she majored in education and sociology. She holds master’s degrees in education from Lipscomb University in Nashville and Middle Tennessee State University and a Ph.D. in curriculum and instruction from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

Related Articles

2 COMMENTS

  1. Would love to see your research and thoughts on any English developmental education efforts at your institutions. I’m currently finishing up my Ed.D. on the underprepared college students.

  2. I am interested in your views on community college developmental department professors not being able or trained to teach Developmental English to the level of advancing incoming students to their next level of class. I experienced one community college where students had been in Developmental English for several semesters! Then, I started up tutoring sessions to help as I held an English Adjunct position but had been trained as a secondary education English teacher with four certifications. Also, I trained secondary English teachers at two school districts. So as I navigate to complete my Ed.D in Community College Leadership, I am interested in establishing a nonprofit tutoring organization to offset the English developmental course/s. My belief is we must find another way to help students when their K-12 public education has failed them!

Leave a Reply

Get the JBHE Weekly Bulletin

Receive our weekly email newsletter delivered to your inbox

Latest News

A Trio of African Americans Appointed to Administrative Positions in Higher Education

Taking on new administrative duties are Constance Meadors at the University of Arkansas Little Rock, Crystal Churchwell Evans at Fisk University in Nashville, and James White at Texas Southern University.

Racial Slurs Found on a Board at the Elizabethtown College Student Center

A racial slur was found written on a board on the second floor of the Baugher Student Center at Elizabethtown College in Pennsylvania. The next day, another racial slur was found at the same location.

In Memoriam: Roy Hudson, 1930-2024

From 1970 to 1976, Dr. Hudson served as the tenth president of what is now Hampton University in Virginia. He also held an interim appointment as president of his undergraduate alma mater, Livingstone College in North Carolina.

Recent Books of Interest to African American Scholars

The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education regularly publishes a list of new books that may be of interest to our readers. The books included are on a wide variety of subjects and present many different points of view.

Featured Jobs