Announcing the task force’s creation, Board Chair Lee Ainslie ’82 and Head of School Charley Stillwell said: “Our school has much work to do, much to learn, and many ways we can grow as an institution and as individuals, as we strive to combat racism effectively and to create an antiracist campus culture.”
Trustee Jonathan Beane ’88, the NFL’s chief officer for diversity and inclusion, is
leading the task force. “We want to create an environment in which everyone is welcomed and allowed to be themselves,” he says. “But at the same time, we want an environment where disagreement is accepted, where different points of view are welcomed. So our job is to create that balance.”
The group’s work began with listening forums for trustees and school leaders to hear from Black and African American students, alumni, and parents as well as families of color about their experiences at EHS. The School also hosted forums for all white alumni, students, and families interested in working with the School as racial-justice allies.
Such events will continue and bring together the entire community. Other summer and early fall work of the School and task force includes:
- Rewrote the student handbook and a Major School Rule to explicitly declare that racism will not be tolerated at Episcopal and to establish a discipline process for violations.
- Began yearlong training with students and faculty to build the awareness, skills, and courage to recognize and stand against racism and prejudice.
- Created best practices for antiracist teaching and classroom norms for discussions of race, language, and textual depictions of racism.
- Implemented an all-School reading of Bryan Stevenson’s “Just Mercy” for students and adults, with ongoing engagement through advisory work and programming through the McCain-Ravenel Center for Intellectual and Moral Courage.
- Began programming and curriculum for students of disparate viewpoints to respectfully engage in even the most challenging sociopolitical issues of the day.