Las Vegas Review-Journal

HIGH schoolers learn about tools at UNLV

MONTH College offers resources for students of color

- By Rachel Spacek Las Vegas Review-journal

Harriet Barlow, who heads a multicultu­ral academic resource center at UNLV, told a group of 275 African-american students that she is “living proof of the value of higher education.”

Barlow, speaking during the university’s African-american Scholars Day, said Friday that she grew up in Robbins, a poor suburb of Chicago, and never thought she would be where she is now.

“Who knew on this day, February 8, 2019, that I, an African-american woman from the Midwest, would find myself in Las Vegas speaking to a group of young, brilliant, beautiful African-american (students) and students of color to tell you that you … can fly and you can dive and you can soar,” said Barlow, executive director of The Intersecti­on resource center at UNLV.

Barlow’s speech came during an event designed to show high school juniors the opportunit­ies and resources available for students of color.

The last two years UNLV has been named one of the most ethnically diverse undergradu­ate campuses in the nation by U.S. News & World Report. Last year, a University of Southern California report gave UNLV an average ranking for black student access and equity.

The USC report put UNLV’S black student population at 7.6 percent. Estimates from the U.S. Census Bureau put the state’s black population at 9.8 percent in 2018.

Laurel Pritchard, vice provost of undergradu­ate education at UNLV, said students told faculty members at a recent summit that they often weren’t aware of resources available to them.

African-american Scholars Day helps disseminat­e informatio­n about campus resources early, “before students have made a decision” on where to go to college, Pritchard said.

Cheyenne High School 11th-grader Charlie Moore said he was excited to learn about different majors, minors and electives available at UNLV.

“For me, I’m trying to go to college for business and entertainm­ent,” Moore said.

Students from Democracy Preparator­y Academy at Agassi Campus as well as Arbor View, Canyon Springs, Cheyenne, Clark and Mojave high schools toured the campus and learned about tools available to students.

Cheyenne counselor Cashia Kearney said she was glad the students were getting exposure to their hometown university and finding out about new technology available to UNLV students.

Barlow said students of color are often first-generation college students and “may not have connection­s or knowledge of the various resources, and the idea of going to college is not even something that is thought about.”

“To be able to have activities like this where students can see people who look like them who have taken the path through college and that it is possible is always very good,” she said.

Contact Rachel Spacek at 702-3872921 or rspacek@reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @Rachelspac­ek on Twitter.

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