The
Carruthers Center for Inner City Studies (CCICS) was established on
September 8, 1966 during the early years of Northeastern Illinois
University, which was founded in 1963. Dr. Donald Smith, one of the
few Black professors and the first Director of the Center, provided
the leadership in conceiving of the idea and mobilizing the
university community to support this project. However, one former
Director of CCICS, the late Dr. Donn Bailey, revealed, “The
educational aspirations and demands of the largely Black inner city
community in the mid-1960s were so forcefully and compellingly put
that one can say that the community sired the Center for Inner City
Studies.”
Outstanding
educational leaders in the Chicago inner city, such as Dr. Barbara
Sizemore, Dr. Anderson Thompson, and grassroots community residents,
gave Dr. Smith the support he needed to convince the college that
such a project was necessary. Federal funding was granted from the
Office of Education that provided the initial support for two years
before becoming a permanent part of the university’s academic
programs. He then gathered a brilliant staff of inner city educators
from Chicago and across the nation, who developed the initial
graduate CCICS curriculum. This distinguished group included Dr.
Nancy Arnez (the second director of the Center), Dr. Donn Bailey (the
third director), Dr. Edward Barnes, and Dr. Sonja Stone (the first
Chair of the Department of Inner City Studies Education). Dr. Carol
Adams served as the director from 2000-2003 and I, Dr. Conrad Worrill
have served as the director since 2003.
The
first CCICS program was the federal funded, Experienced Teacher
Fellowship Program (ETFP), a Master’s degree program for
retraining inner city teachers, who were struggling to understand and
serve the communities where they worked. The students came from many
urban areas throughout the United States. In 1968, this innovative
experiment led the College of Education to establish the Department
of Inner City Studies Education, with two Master’s degree
programs; an M.A. in Inner City Studies Education (ICSE) and an M.Ed.
in Inner City Studies. In 1970-71, the Center’s undergraduate
program evolved from another federally funded program, the Career
Opportunities Program (COP). This program resulted in the full
certification of four hundred inner city Teacher Aides, who had
virtually sprung from the inner city in the wake of the urban
rebellions of the 1960s.
Under
the leadership of two brilliant African Centered faculty members, the
late Dr. Jacob H. Carruthers and Dr. Anderson Thompson, CCICS
endeavored, for over fifty-years to develop a curriculum philosophy
and theoretical framework that examine social experience from an
African Centered perspective. The rewards of these efforts have been
enriching for the academic community world-wide, as well as the inner
city community.
Through
its curriculum arm, the Department of Inner City Studies Education
(now an academic program in the Department of Educational Inquiry and
Curriculum Studies) CCICS has successfully developed undergraduate
and graduate programs. These programs combine Inner City Studies with
a minor, Inner City Careers, African Caribbean Studies, experienced
and prospective teacher programs, as well as the development of the
Mexican/Caribbean Studies Minor, which has now become a major in
Latin and Latin American Studies. Some of these programs led CCICS to
the development of other major thrusts. African Caribbean Studies
spawned the Kemetic Institute and the establishment of the African
Study Tours, which broadened the CCICS curriculum to include on-going
international student and faculty participation. Also, the Kemetic
Institute sponsors the Teaching About Africa (TAA) Program aimed at
providing teaches with curriculum material to be used in all subjects
concerning the contributions of African people from ancient times to
the present.
The
Career Opportunity Program of the early 1970s was the foundation of
the ICSE undergraduate program. Similarly, the Inner City Careers
Minor has given birth to the collaboration with, and establishment
of, a combined major in Elementary Education or Early Childhood
Education that leads to a Language Arts Endorsement.
Additionally,
in recent years, CCICS has established the Illinois Transatlantic
Slave Trade Commission Project (ITSTC) that conducts on-going
research on the slave trade and its continued impact on African
people and the world. The Great Black Music Project (GBMP) is another
addition to the vibrant research and programmatic trust of CCICS in
preserving the great Black music developed out of this community.
From
our base of service to the community, CCICS has become a leader in
the educational community. Out of more than 1000 graduates from the
ICSE Master’s degree program, approximately 151 have gone on to
earn their Ph.D. An impressive percentage of CCICS undergraduates
have obtained their Bachelor’s degree and continued though the
ICSE Master’s program. Indeed, many of our graduates have
attained high positions in the institutions that serve the inner city
from the public schools and other educational institutions as
teachers and administrators, to city administration, law enforcement
and correctional administration, municipal and circuit court judges,
and a variety of social service agencies, both private and public.
Thus, the ideas generated at CCICS are now a part of the thinking of
many of those who are in leadership positions throughout America.
It
is important that we become experts on the trends and developments of
the inner city. For those who are interested in pursuing an academic
career that deals with the problems and prospects of the inner city
from an African Centered perspective, take advantage of this
“Academic Goldmine.” Contact the Carruthers Center for
Inner City Studies for a full orientation on how to become part of
this established academic discipline. The Carruthers Center should
endure for the next fifty-years by continuing in its established
tradition.
|