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History and Mission
In 1988 the Andrew W.
Mellon Foundation launched a program designed to increase the number of
African-American, Latino/a, and American Indian faculty members at U.S.
colleges and universities by providing academically promising students from
these groups with mentoring, opportunities for conducting independent
research, skills development, and initiation into the academic life.
Wesleyan's Mellon Program has been in existence since 1989, and received its
fourth round of funding in 2000. Of the 100-plus PhDs who have emerged from
the MMUF as of the spring of 2004, 4 are Wesleyan alumni and 9 are currently
in graduate school in PhD programs.
In 2003, in response to
the Supreme Court decisions in the two University of Michigan
affirmative-action cases and to persistent attacks on race-based programs at
U.S. institutions of higher learning, the Foundation reaffirmed its
commitment to the Fellowship and broadened its mission. At the same time,
the Foundation renamed the program to connect its mission to the societal,
scholarly, and educational commitments and achievements of Dr. Benjamin E.
Mays (1894-1984), a life-long champion of civil rights, a distinguished
scholar of religion, mentor to Martin Luther King, Jr., and president of
Morehouse College from 1940 to 1967.
The MMUF mission
statement now reads: "The fundamental objective of MMUF is to increase
the number of minority students, and others with a demonstrated commitment
to eradicating racial disparities, who will pursue PhDs in core fields in
the arts and sciences. The program aims to reduce over time the serious
underrepresentation on faculties of individuals from certain minority
groups, as well as to address the attendant educational consequences of
these disparities. The program serves the related goals of
structuring campus environments so that they will be more conducive to
improved racial and ethnic relations, and of providing role models for all
youth." |