Fall 2017 – UofL News Mon, 20 Apr 2026 15:43:07 +0000 en-US hourly 1 The Power of Truth /magazine/the-power-of-truth/ /magazine/the-power-of-truth/#respond Tue, 21 Nov 2017 16:12:50 +0000 http://uoflnews.com/?p=39422

TreyVon Neely knows what people see when West Louisville is described in the media: violence, inequality, crime, poverty.

The 23-year-old was born and raised in the California neighborhood. Yes, he has seen friends and family affected by violence. Yes, he and people close to him have had run-ins with the judicial system.

But Neely sees something else in West Louisville. Something he considers much more important and true to his experience.

He sees his childhood. He sees a place where neighbors stop their cars on the corner just to say hello. He sees, at its core, a community filled with strong, resilient residents.

“This is home,” he said.

Neely is one of several West Louisville youth fellows working with the University of Louisville’s to rewrite the narrative of how West Louisville neighborhoods, residents and, specifically, youth are viewed. By combining academic research with grassroots community action, , aims to reduce youth violence by helping young people understand the context associated with the conditions in which they live, and to provide them with the tools they need to lead the community toward transformation.

“It’s really personal for me to make a change,” Neely said, with a look of quiet resolve.

Neighborhood block party
Youth fellows and community members shared the Pride, Peace, Prevention campaign at a block party in May.

Pride, Peace, Prevention

The YVPRC was established in 2015 with a five-year, $5.7 million grant from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and is a National Center of Excellence in Youth Violence Prevention. It is one of only seven Centers of Excellence in the country dedicated to curbing youth violence.

“At the end of the day, our young people are returning to very toxic situations that cause them to make daily decisions about what they are going to do. For some, it’s not because they don’t know better but sometimes they don’t have a choice,” said Monique Ingram, director of the center. “Ultimately we want to change the social conditions and create environments where violence is not the first resort.”

Changing social conditions requires a thorough understanding of how those conditions came to be. That’s why another goal of the YVPRC’s efforts is to counter and shift the dominant narrative surrounding what it means to be an African American in the United States, a narrative borne from injustice and inaccurate portrayals of history.

“Historical patterns of racial discrimination, inequality and lack of economic opportunity have helped foster beliefs that promote and condone violence,” said Monica Wendel, principal investigator of the CDC grant. “When a distinct portion of the population systematically does not receive justice from the institutions of society, they begin to believe that the only justice they receive is justice they exact themselves.”

The YVPRC faculty and staff brought years of behavioral research to the table. But to truly affect change in West Louisville, they couldn’t rely on research alone. They needed the expertise of the community.

In this case, many of the experts were teenagers.

The center chose a cohort of eight young people between the ages of 16 and 24 from West Louisville to be Youth Violence Prevention Fellows. The fellows, along with YVPRC and community partners, are designing and implementing a three-year social-norming campaign targeted at getting their peers to change long-held behaviors, and boost pride in their community and their culture.

“Science tells us that social norms affect individual behavior,” Wendel said. “If we think people who are like us act a certain way or expect us to act a certain way in a specific situation, we’re more likely to act that way — whether we agree with it or not.

“But sometimes, our perceptions of those norms are inaccurate,” she added. “Media often make things worse by only portraying negative images and narratives of minority populations, while the positive images of the population remain unseen.”

The social-norming campaign, called “Pride, Peace, Prevention,” launched in spring 2017 and uses social media, television and radio ads, bus shelter signs and billboards to connect youth with positive messages and imagery relative to African Americans. The fellows also use local community events, like block parties and the Dirt Bowl, an annual West Louisville basketball tournament, as opportunities to engage the community in conversation.

“We couldn’t do this without the fellows,” Wendel said. “We want to equip them and empower them to see they can rally people for change.”

Neely and Thomas talking
Neely and Thomas stop to talk to a friend who was driving by.

Putting it in perspective

Before the fellows could share the campaign message with their peers they needed to build pride in themselves by gaining a more accurate understanding of their race and culture. They participated in sessions to raise their critical consciousness, including those that connected historical facts with current context and taught them how to dispel myths surrounding what it means to be an African American youth.

The fellows spent hours researching African and world history, learning about an African heritage that reveals a lineage of royal families, kingdoms and empires, and developments and contributions to the fields of medicine, science and technology. They immersed themselves in stories that history books often gloss over, including how African Americans contributed to building the infrastructure and economic capital of the United States through slave labor.

They grew their understanding of modern-day African American hidden figures, coupled with a once-in-a-lifetime experience to take part in the dedication ceremony of the , and be among the first to encounter hands-on exhibits about the fight against racial injustice throughout American history.

It was important for the fellows to understand the history of policies and practices, such as racial segregation and redlining, that resulted in West Louisville looking the way it does and its residents experiencing the struggles they experience, Ingram said.

“A person doesn’t wake up and say ‘I want to kill someone and go to jail’,” said 17-year-old Jailen Leavell, one of the fellows.

“History is our playbook,” said another fellow, Elijah Thomas, 19. “It’s very key in regards to progression on all fronts. It helps us get down to the root of what facilitates our destruction.”

The imagery for the Pride, Peace, Prevention campaign shows the fellows recreating African American leaders who changed history, including Rosa Parks, Thurgood Marshall, Tommie Smith and others. Thomas, for example, portrays Smith in one ad, while Leavell replicates one of Muhammad Ali’s famous poses in another. Imitating these heroes inspired the fellows.

“It helped me gain a sense of self-knowledge,” Thomas said.

Personal growth is critical to the YVPRC mission. “In addition to cultivating a positive racial identity, growing youth in the areas of leadership, advocacy and activism is another important role of the YVPRC,” Ingram said. “We hope to give them a space to develop what they already have within themselves and build capacity to bring lasting change to communities.”

Vision for change

Neely

After learning the history of his neighborhood and his culture, Thomas began to examine his own past. He admitted to using violence as retaliation after bullies taunted him; it even got him expelled from his high school.

“I ended up responding the only way I knew how, which was violence,” he said.

Thomas, who later earned his GED and has attended classes at Jefferson Community and Technical College, said his time with the YVPRC has helped him think more critically about how he responds to provocation, and how he can affect change in himself and his community.

“Change is incremental, it doesn’t happen overnight,” he said. “We are at least looking into what can be done and formulating action strategies.”

One of the action strategies is to have the fellows work with YVPRC partners, including the Louisville Metro Office of Safe and Healthy Neighborhoods and Jefferson County Public Schools, to creatively express their own ideas for furthering the potential impact and application of the Pride, Peace, Prevention campaign.

For example, Leavell began a Black Student Union at his high school, with the goal of educating his peers about African American history, racial issues and social justice. Meetings included discussions with African American community leaders such as Attica Scott, a Kentucky Congresswoman and former Louisville Metro Council Representative, and Kevin Cosby, president of Simmons College and senior pastor of St. Stephen Church.

“I am trying to reach out and pull others through the door. I want to open their eyes to understanding their identity and be proud of who they are.”

Leavell, who completed his YVPRC fellowship this summer, is now a broadcast major at Tennessee State University. He hopes to launch a campus television show there that tackles racial and social justice issues. Before his experience with YVPRC he did not understand how historic practices and certain legislation could contribute to poverty and violence, he said. Now, he feels it is his responsibility to inform others.

“Working at the YVPRC was one of the best experiences of my life,” Leavell said. “Knowing your history is a start to changing the future.”

Implementing the message

One of the historical re-creation ads from the Pride Peace Prevention campaign.

The YVPRC plans to hire a second cohort of youth fellows to work with researchers such as Aishia Brown, a postdoctoral associate at SPHIS with expertise in social justice youth development. Brown has assisted YVPRC leadership in developing curriculum and future training opportunities that focus on youth leadership and youth community organizing.

In two years, a third cohort will assess the effectiveness of the campaign, comparing the results to the community of East Nashville, Tennessee, which serves as the control site for the project under the leadership of Maury Nation, associate professor at Vanderbilt University Peabody College of ֱ and Human Development. Ideally, the campaign will have contributed to lowering incidents of youth violence in Louisville.

Working with the YVPRC provides a sense of hope that change is possible, Neely and Thomas said. “If you can just touch one person, it sets off a domino effect in the community,” said Thomas.

Still, they temper their optimism with reality.

“Survival sets precedence, so it’s hard to receive that message [of potential change] when you’re focused on other things, like having food to eat,” Thomas said.

Neely acknowledges that the YVPRC faces an uphill battle in adjusting perceptions.

“These ills and problems can’t be fixed with programs alone,” he said. “For me, it’s trying to navigate these systems. I’m going to try to do what everyone says I can’t do.”

Neely, who now works for the and plans to resume classes at UofL, will continue as a YVPRC youth fellow for another year so he can keep shifting West Louisville’s story and sharing with other young people what he has learned.

“I am trying to reach out and pull others through the door,” he said. “I want to open their eyes to understanding their identity and being proud of who they are.”

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Seven reasons to celebrate 2017 /magazine/seven-reasons-to-celebrate-2017/ /magazine/seven-reasons-to-celebrate-2017/#respond Tue, 21 Nov 2017 16:11:02 +0000 http://uoflnews.com/?post_type=magazine&p=39568 Seven certainly seems to be a lucky number for UofL, as years that end in “7” pop up in significant events throughout campus history. Here are seven schools, organizations and traditions that celebrated anniversaries in 2017. Some anniversaries are centuries in the making while others are more recent. But all demonstrate that UofL has a long history of academic excellence and Cardinal tradition that continues today.

1837 – Louisville Medical Institute opens doors

The Louisville Medical Institute was founded in 1837 as Louisville’s first medical school. It was later purchased by the University of Louisville and merged many times over the years, resulting in what is now recognized as the UofL School of Medicine. This year, the school will celebrate 180 years of medical education in Louisville. The school has now graduated more doctors than any other institution in the Commonwealth. UofL has since partnered with Norton Children’s Hospital, Kentucky’s only full-service, free-standing pediatric care facility dedicated exclusively to caring for children, and James Graham Brown Cancer Center, which is a global leader in immunotherapy in addition to having one of the largest clinical trial programs in the region.

1887 – UofL dental department created

In 1887, the Hospital College of Medicine created a dental department, which eventually led to the creation of the UofL School of Dentistry in 1918. This year is the 130-year milestone for the School of Dentistry. The school has an estimated 100,000 patient visits each year, allowing individuals and families access to oral care and allowing students to practice dentistry. In addition to hands-on training, the dental facility has some of the most advanced simulation technology available. With the school on the cutting edge of technology, the next 130 years are certain to produce plenty to smile about.

1947 – Songwriting contest leads to longtime alma mater

In 1947, the University of Louisville proposed a contest to students with a grand prize of $50 for best composed school song. Band members James Powell, of J.B. Speed School, and John Newton, of the College of Arts and Sciences, submitted their take on a school song. Their alma mater was selected and premiered at the November 1947 homecoming and has endured longer than any other school song.

We thy sons and daughters now stand

To sing thy highest praise.

With deepest rev’rence in our hearts

For these our college days.

Thy honor true we all defend

‘Tis known we love thee well.

Our thought for years to come will be

Of thee our UofL.

1967 – Ceremonial mace added to commencement

Once considered a weapon of war, maces have been repurposed to show the strength and prestige of a university. In the fall of 1966, the Board of Trustees commissioned a scepter to be crafted, which would be at the center of all future formal proceedings. The gold-plated, cherry wood mace, which measures 43 inches long and weighs 20 pounds, was intended to symbolize the uncertainty and beauty of the future. Assistant Professor of Fine Arts John Prangell designed and sculpted the mace. On June 11, 1967, UofL began a time-honored tradition as registrar John Houchens carried the mace on its maiden voyage down the commencement procession. The mace, when not in use, resides in the office of the provost. UofL’s mace was displayed alongside other prominent university scepters at the Duke University Museum of Art in 1970.

1997 – School of Law named for Supreme Court justice

Louis D. Brandeis School of Law received its revered moniker two decades ago, a Supreme Court Justice, Brandeis desired the school to be “a national model in legal education emphasizing public service.” Since receiving the Brandeis name, UofL’s law school was named one of the nation’s top “Best Value Law Schools” and has attained the highest bar passage rate in the state at 86.5 percent. Through it all, Brandeis has remained front and center — his grave rests under the front steps of the building bearing his name. During finals week, rocks and coins may be found on his grave as students hope it will bring them good fortune on their exams. Brandeis’s ideas for the school’s success were “The aim must be high and the vision broad; the goal seemingly attainable but beyond immediate reach.” In two decades, the School of Law surely has made good on those aspirations.

2007 – LGBT Center opens

The LGBT Center is celebrating a decade of pride. Much has changed since the center started as an office in an unused janitorial closet. In 10 short years, the LGBT Center has made UofL a leader in LGBT issues. UofL was the first school in Kentucky to offer health insurance to LGBT couples, and to add “gender identity” to the list included in discrimination policies, and the first school in the country to endow a chair in LGBT studies. The university acquired gender-neutral bathrooms and launched the Rustin Community, which is the region’s first LGBTQ and ally-themed housing floor. While their work is not yet complete, the movement for the acceptance of LGBT students has come a long way and the future looks promising.

2007 – UofL partners with west Louisville organizations

2017 marks the 10th anniversary of the Signature Partnership Initiative, UofL’s premier community engagement effort. The initiative started in 2007 with a goal to enhance the quality of life for residents of West Louisville through the integration of health, social and human services and economic viability of the community. The initiative gained traction and attracted the attention of higher education institutions across the country for its unmatched dedication to the community. UofL is one of 239 schools to earn a community engagement classification from the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, which is awarded to schools that demonstrate excellence in community involvement. Last year, 111 community partnerships occurred due to the initiative and thousands of faculty and students were involved.

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