Posted on April 3, 2018

Students Earn Credit for Attending White Privilege Conference

Toni Airaksinen, Campus Reform, April 2, 2018

The University of Colorado-Colorado Springs is currently offering a class awarding students up to 3 academic credits for attending the White Privilege Conference.

Taught by Abby Ferber, a sociology professor who is also co-organizes the White Privilege Conference, the “Intersections of Privilege” course is meeting exclusively online except for required attendance at the annual conference, which will be held this year in Grand Rapids, Michigan.

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Though the course description is brief, the White Privilege Conference is well-known as an annual conference dedicated to deconstructing white privilege, promoting social justice advocacy, and elevating strategies for white people to promote racial justice.

Students in the “Intersections of Privilege” class can choose from among more than 100 individual workshops during their four-day sojourn, including “Breaking the Chains of Capitalism and White Supremacy,” the “Whiteness of Law,” and another on “How Whiteness Kills.”

This year’s conference will be held April 4-7 at Grand Valley State University, which initially offered its students scholarships to cover registration costs until Campus Reform inquired about how the public university was funding them last July.

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The course credit can be applied toward the University of Colorado’s Graduate Certificate in Diversity, Social Justice, and Inclusion. To earn the certificate, students can also take other classes such as “Unmasking Whiteness,” and another on “Social Health Justice.”

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