september Event:

fostering innovation in higher education to enhance workforce outcomes in kansas city and beyond: The Role of racial equity and cultural transformation


Ebony McGee worked as an electrical engineer for several Fortune 500 companies before an epiphany changed her career path.

“I realized that I wasn’t impacting the lives of others in a way that made sense to me. On my tombstone, I didn’t want it to say, ‘She made power products.’ I wanted something more meaningful for my life,” McGee explains in a Vanderbilt University faculty profile video.

Inspired by her own experiences in a workplace that was “mostly white and mostly male,” McGee now studies racial inequality and marginalization in higher education and STEM professions. Her research focuses on the racialized experiences and racial stereotypes that adversely affect the education and career trajectories of underrepresented groups of color, as well as the physical and mental wellness issues these students face.

“The process of healing from racial battle fatigue and institutional racism requires significant internal commitment and external support. Black college students are brilliant, talented and creative, and they dream as big as other students. Pursuing higher education should not make them sick,” McGee wrote in a 2015 publication.

A professor of education, diversity and STEM education in Vanderbilt’s Peabody College, McGee discussed this topic at 11:00 AM central standard time during a webinar hosted by Integrating STEM + KC as our final keynote presentation of the deconstructed conference.

After leaving her career in electrical engineering, McGee earned a doctorate in math education from the University of Illinois at Chicago, a Spencer Postdoctoral Fellowship at the University of Chicago and a National Science Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowship at Northwestern University. She co-founded the Explorations in Diversifying Engineering Faculty Initiative and the Institute in Critical Quantitative and Mixed Methodologies Training for Underrepresented Scholars.

McGee authored the book Black, Brown, Bruised: How Racialized STEM Education Stifles Innovation and was lead editor of the book Diversifying STEM: Multidisciplinary Perspectives on Race and Gender. Her research has been featured in The Atlantic, Diverse Issues in Higher Education, The Chronicle of Higher Education, NPR’s “Code Switch,” Christian Science Monitor, Huffington Post, U.S. News & World Report and Inside Higher Education.

You can purchase Dr. McGee's book from the UMKC Bookstore at this link: https://www.umkcbookstore.com/ (The UMKC Bookstore is a not-for-profit enterprise, with all income from purchases returned to the students through the UMKC general fund.)