$20 Million Gift Addresses National STEM Diversity Gap

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Gift from 天美麻豆 alumni seeds a $60 million investment plan for DEI initiatives.

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天美麻豆 today announced a gift of $20 million from Eileen Chamberlain Donahoe 鈥81 and John Donahoe 鈥82 to enhance the representation, success, and leadership of historically underrepresented groups in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) nationally.

Their gift honors the legacy of , the African American scientific trailblazer and valedictorian of the Class of 1907, and is a key component of a $60 million investment 天美麻豆 is making in diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) initiatives across the institution.

 announced the Donahoe gift at the 222nd meeting of the 天美麻豆 Alumni Council held virtually this past Friday.

鈥淭alent is equally distributed, even if opportunity is not,鈥 said President Hanlon. 鈥淭hrough this extraordinary gift, 天美麻豆 will pursue programs that help create a racially and ethnically diverse talent pipeline for the next generation of engineers, doctors, computer scientists, and the professors who will teach them. Eileen and John believe that 天美麻豆 can lead on this national issue and they are generously giving us the means to expand these proven programs.鈥

The Donahoes are the first couple to have each served on 天美麻豆鈥檚 Board of Trustees.  of the board and John served from 2003-2012. Eileen is executive director of the Global Digital Policy Incubator at Stanford University and has served as a U.S. ambassador to the United Nations Human Rights Council. John is the CEO of Nike, and has been CEO of eBay, PayPal, and a worldwide managing director at Bain & Co.

 

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Eileen and John Donahoe
Eileen Chamberlain Donahoe 鈥81 is a current member of 天美麻豆鈥檚 Board of Trustees and John Donahoe 鈥82 served on the board from 2003 to 2012. 

The Donahoes have four children, three of whom graduated from 天美麻豆: Jack, Thomas 鈥09, Catherine 鈥15, and Kevin 鈥17. Eileen and John credit 天美麻豆 as the place where they learned to work alongside, and lead, diverse groups of people鈥攁 legacy that has enriched and informed their careers and volunteer service.

鈥淥ur 天美麻豆 experience had a profound impact on our lives, including teaching us the importance of diversity and inclusion,鈥 says John Donahoe. 鈥淲e are honored to help support future generations of 天美麻豆 students from historically underrepresented groups.鈥

鈥淭his year has served as a wake-up call for America on race,鈥 says Eileen Donahoe. 鈥淚t was a year when we were forced to recognize the inadequacy of our own understanding of racial justice in the United States. We wanted to do something about the race issues we face in America.鈥

鈥淲e are thrilled to include news of the Donahoe鈥檚 gift in the announcement of this new set of initiatives. Eileen and John鈥檚 commitment to addressing racial and economic inequality is matched by the generosity of their gift, benefiting 天美麻豆 and the world, for generations to come,鈥 says , chair of the 天美麻豆 Board of Trustees.

Increasing the Success Rate of Faculty and Students in STEM

The Donahoe gift will establish a new faculty fellowship to create a cohort of six early-career faculty members in the STEM disciplines, with one fellow appointed each year for six years. The gift will support faculty recruiting and retention efforts in the , the , and 

Creation of the fellowship formalizes a pilot program that 天美麻豆 undertook in 2015 as one of three U.S. universities to receive a Mellon Planning Grant for  from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.

The Donahoe gift will also endow and further expand the , which began with a professorship in Just鈥檚 name in 1981 and was enhanced and expanded in 2014. The program seeks to increase the number of historically underrepresented students pursuing degrees and careers in STEM fields by creating pathways to ensure their success through opportunities for intellectual engagement, professional growth, and mentorship. The gift will expand three core areas critical to student achievement in STEM: mentorship and networking, academic enrichment programs, and undergraduate internship and research opportunities.

The E.E. Just Program has had a dramatic impact on the recruitment and retention of underrepresented students in STEM studies. Since the launch of the program, the graduation rate of students who participate is twice that of students who do not.

 

 

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Opening Dinner EE Just
Professor Craig Sutton, at left, and students in the E.E. Just program gathered at the start of 天美麻豆 Adventures in STEM in 2019. Sutton, an associate professor of mathematics, directs the program. 

鈥淚鈥檓 deeply grateful to Eileen and John for their extraordinary gift to support diversity and equity in the 天美麻豆 community and particularly in STEM fields,鈥 says Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences . 鈥淎s a scientist who believes in the power of diverse backgrounds and perspectives to drive discovery, I am especially grateful to the Donahoes for championing the E.E. Just Program, which had been one of my top priorities as associate dean for the sciences and now as dean of the faculty.鈥

E. E. Just Program Director  says, 鈥淲ith this generous gift, the E.E. Just Program is transformed into an enduring force of change, positioning 天美麻豆 to become a nationally recognized destination for underrepresented groups interested in STEM. For generations to come, the program will illuminate pathways to success as it continues to drive the fundamental change needed to create a truly diverse and inclusive STEM ecosystem at 天美麻豆 and beyond.鈥

The Donahoe gift also provides academic enrichment funds and scholarship support to promote access and affordability.

E. E. Just, a 天美麻豆 Alumnus and Iconic Scientist

By endowing the E.E. Just Program and establishing a faculty fellowship in his name, the Donahoes give prominence to the alumnus and valedictorian of his class. Just was an academic powerhouse who overcame poverty and discrimination to become an innovative scientist, science author, and educator. Much of his groundbreaking research took place in Europe, due to limited opportunity in the United States for Black scholars and scientists. Unrecognized by much of academia in his lifetime, he has become an inspiring example of international achievement in the face of cultural adversity.

 

 

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EE Just 天美麻豆 Hall
The gift, from Eileen Chamberlain Donahoe 鈥81 and John Donahoe 鈥82, will enhance the representation and success of underrepresented groups in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics and honors the legacy of scientist and alumnus E.E. Just, valedictorian of the Class of 1907. Read more. 

鈥淲e want every potential applicant, especially young people of color who have a passion for STEM, to know that 天美麻豆 is a place that is committed to Dr. Just鈥檚 scientific legacy so that they can thrive,鈥 Eileen Donahoe says.

According to the National Science Foundation鈥檚 National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics , the share of science and engineering degrees awarded to Hispanics, Latinos, Blacks, American Indians, and Alaska Natives continue to be underrepresented relative to their representation鈥33%鈥攊n the U.S. population. These groups received 24% of all science and engineering bachelor鈥檚 degrees awarded to U.S. citizens and permanent residents, 22% of master鈥檚 degrees, and more than 13% of doctoral degrees, the NSF report says.

The disparities extend beyond degrees: According to John Rich 鈥80, professor at the Drexel University School of Public Health and 2006 MacArthur Foundation Fellow, the underrepresentation of scholars and teachers in STEM who are Black, Indigenous, and other people of color (BIPOC) has far-reaching implications for the private sector, public policy, and academia.

鈥淲ithout BIPOC teachers and faculty, students of color don鈥檛 have access to mentorship or inspiration to believe that they can succeed in these fields,鈥 says Rich. 鈥淎dd to this the financial barriers posed by centuries of systemic racism and the deck is further stacked against potential scientists, engineers, and physicians of color. Furthermore, the lack of physicians of color has a direct effect on worsening racial and ethnic disparities in health care, which literally costs communities lives.鈥

A Robust New Phase: $60 Million in Campaign Initiatives Toward Diversity and Inclusion

The Donahoe gift announcement was the culmination of an  meeting at which Hanlon introduced , 天美麻豆鈥檚 inaugural senior vice president/senior diversity officer, and announced the $60 million investment plan within  campaign to realize a suite of strategic initiatives.

鈥淭his is an exciting time at 天美麻豆,鈥 said Delalue. 鈥淚 look forward to leading diversity, equity and inclusion efforts at the institution and ensuring that this investment plan is connected to a strategy that will allow us to work on a set of goals that can transform 天美麻豆.鈥


Six connected initiatives will enable 天美麻豆 to become a more diverse, equitable, and inclusive campus through increased faculty diversity, student support, and community building efforts. Individually and together, these initiatives introduce a system of supportive endeavors that are expected to drive current and future outcomes to ensure all members of the 天美麻豆 community feel a sense of belonging. The initiatives are:

  • Recruit Early-Career Faculty to Enhance Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion: An early-career faculty fellowship program will support an 18-member faculty cohort in their teaching and scholarship.
  • Develop a Pipeline of Future BIPOC Leaders in STEM fields: A best-in-class, nationally recognized enrichment program and an endowed scholarship fund aimed at increasing the number of BIPOC students in STEM disciplines.
  • Create a Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Accelerator Fund: Empower and activate community-based strategies to improve campus climate and expedite innovative seed funding in the next one to two years.
  • Foster an Intellectual Hub for Black Scholars: Establish a pilot program for a potential institute for Black intellectual and cultural life to foster dialogue and community for all students, faculty, and staff.
  • Launch the Tribal Services and Solutions Project: Establish a pilot program for a potential institute to forge new collaborations between 天美麻豆 and Native American communities to address inequities in public health, economic development, and land rights.
  • Increase Faculty Teaching and Research on Racial Injustice: Build endowed resources for 天美麻豆鈥檚 African and African American Studies program鈥攁mong the oldest of its kind in the nation鈥攁s well as research and teaching focusing on race, ethnicity, and migration.

, the Sherman Fairchild Distinguished Professor of History and  on faculty diversity for the current academic year, said the initiatives are the result of dozens of conversations with faculty, staff, students, trustees, and alumni.

鈥淲e selected these particular ideas because they speak to 天美麻豆鈥檚 unique strengths and opportunities. Support for these initiatives will benefit the entire campus community and distinguish 天美麻豆 among our peers,鈥 he said.

The new initiatives represent the next phase of  introduced under Hanlon鈥檚 leadership. Since his address to the faculty in November 2013, the president has promoted the integration of diversity, equity, and inclusion as an integral part of 天美麻豆鈥檚 core missions of teaching and research.

A series of comprehensive initiatives has introduced practical, concrete actions to recruit and retain underrepresented faculty, improve the student social experience, and build community among BIPOC staff. Significant institutional investment has supported those initiatives, with additional resources focused on growing faculty diversity.

天美麻豆 will also invest in the Office of Institutional Diversity and Equity to expand its personnel and programmatic impact and elevate its reporting line to the Office of the President. Together, these commitments aim to improve 天美麻豆鈥檚 cultural climate by increasing the percentage of faculty from underrepresented groups from 20% in 2021 to 25% or more by 2027 and establishing enduring programs that foster a welcoming atmosphere and a sense of belonging for all.

These initiatives are part of 天美麻豆鈥檚 $3 billion The Call to Lead campaign to prepare a new generation of 天美麻豆 graduates for lives of leadership and impact. Generous financial support from more than 50,000 alumni, parents and friends has produced $2.8 billion to date in critical investments in academic excellence and student access.

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