Dr. Robert Cosby speaks with Dr. Frederica Barrow. She speaks about her upbringing in the rural town of Greensboro, North Carolina during the Jim Crow era, and her experiences with discrimination and racism that thrived at the time. Dr. Frederica Barrow also shares her experiences of fighting injustices by participating in sit-ins and boycotting for civil social justice. Dr. Barrow stressed some of the challenges in the field of education including how some governing officials are preventing schools from having access to African American literature. Lastly, Dr. Barrow plainly states how the prison system systemically disadvantages African Americans, including the devastating and lasting impact on children whose parents are incarcerated.
Dr. Frederica Barrow graduated with a Bachelor's Degree in Psychology from North Carolina Central State University in 1960. She furthered her education and received a Master's Degree in Social Work from Clark-Atlanta University in 1962. In 1980, Dr. Frederica Barrow obtained a Master's Degree from the Cary School of Business at Johns Hopkins University. Later in her life, Dr. Frederica Barrow went back to school and received a Doctor of Philosophy Degree from Howard University in 2001.
The podcast features music performed by the Howard University Jazz Ensemble, Under the direction of Fred Irby III.
Informações
- Podcast
- Publicado22 de maio de 2023 20:00 UTC
- Duração42min
- ClassificaçãoLivre