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Tuesday, November 26, 2024

Grambling State Call Me Mister program set to host first Louisiana conference June 30

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Not even halfway through the year, 2022 has been big for the Call Me MiSTER program at Grambling State University (GSU).

Earlier this year the GSU Call Me MiSTER program was awarded $2  million as part of $15 million in federal funding for the state’s Fifth  Congressional District share of the annual federal budget.

Grambling State University is now set to host the 2022 Call Me MiSTER  conference on June 30 from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Frederick C. Hobdy  Assembly Center. Using the theme DETERMINED, the event will be the first  of its kind in the state of Louisiana.

The Call Me MiSTER (Mentors Instructing Students Toward Effective  Role models) program was founded originally at Clemson University in  2000. The program strives to increase the pool of available teachers  from a more diverse background, particularly among the lowest-performing  elementary schools.

Because less than 2% of the teachers in the U.S. are African American  males, Grambling State’s Black Male Teacher Initiative joined with  Clemson’s program to help develop and recruit more Black men into the  teaching profession.

Student participants are largely selected from under-served,  socio-economically disadvantaged, and educationally at-risk communities.  Call Me MiSTER serves students at 19 participating colleges within  South Carolina as well as eight national partner institutions, including  Grambling State.

“We are very excited to host this great national event. We understand  that there is a teacher shortage everywhere, but when you think about  where to go get Black male teachers, you must consider contacting  Grambling State University,” said Dr. George Noflin, an associate  professor and director of GSU’s Call Me MiSTER program.

Noflin said the conference will have several objectives including:  Bringing awareness to the Call Me MiSTER Program; Reaffirming the  determination and resilience of black men as servant leaders; Presenting  the possibility of using the pre-teacher pathway as an avenue to create  an Aspiring MiSTER Program in school districts to create a pipeline  from school districts to Grambling State and back to school districts;  and Ringing the bell from a national stage that Black men are great  husbands, great fathers, and great teachers.

Roy Jones, the executive director of the Eugene T. Moore School of  Education’s Call Me Mister program at Clemson, said he is pleased to see  Grambling State hosting the conference and proudly awaits participating  in it.

“The Call Me MiSTER Program National Office at Clemson University  Congratulates Grambling State University for their extraordinary  initiative to host a Louisiana statewide conference entitled  DETERMINED!,” Jones said. “The aim to increase primarily the number of  African American male Educators and provide resources and networking  opportunities for participants is well aligned with the objectives of  the nationally acclaimed Call Me MiSTER program. My colleagues and I are  honored to be invited to participate in this milestone event at  Grambling and expect the synergy generated will further empower  determination among many desiring to make a transformative difference in  their communities.”

Jones credited the work of Noflin and others at Grambling State for  the work the university has done in making a quick and big impact on the  Call Me MiSTER program in an endorsement letter he sent to GSU  President Rick Gallot.

“Dr. George Noflin has been a great ambassador for your institution  and a joy to work with as he continues to develop the MiSTERs  participating in the program,” Jones wrote. “For years, I have heard so  many positive comments from colleagues among several other institutions,  who have credited Dr. Noflin for his unselfish assistance with their  newly minted program in the region. My colleagues and I look forward to  our opportunity to visit Grambling in June in support of your statewide  convening. It will certainly be a time of celebration, inspirational and  instructional given the powerful lineup on the agenda.”

Those making appearances at GSU’s conference will include U.S.  Congresswoman Julia Letlow from Monroe, Louisiana, who helped bring in  the federal funding for GSU’s Call Me MiSTER program along with Edward  Williams, the first MiSTER in Mississippi; Nick Cobb, the first MiSTER  in Louisiana; and Rashad Anderson, director of the Call Me MiSTER  program at South Carolina State University.

“As I think about how this program is growing, I must remember that  to whom much is given, much is required, and it just makes us that much  more determined and committed to help the students we have to be  successful,” Noflin said. “Our true success is not in this conference,  but it is how successful the future teachers are as they influence the  children they serve.”

Student registration for the conference will cost $50 while  individual registration will be $125. Registration is available online  at gram.edu/callmemisterconference.

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