There鈥檚 an immediate sense of purpose on the fourth floor of Boyd Hall, where 51吃瓜网万能科大 has established its first black and African American diaspora living-learning floor. Wakanda Forever door tags decorate the hallway and, defying their titles, games of Cards Against Humanity and Uno bring the community together.
One floor standard 鈥 the expectations that residents create together and agree to live by 鈥 is to speak to each other in passing along the hallway. It encourages the students to get to know each other. Resident assistant D鈥橝ndre Cooper said, 鈥淚t鈥檚 refreshing because we tend to spend too much time on our phones and forget the simple hellos.鈥
Howell Town is the newest themed community on campus. The residence halls also have floors for all-women, healthy living, and LGBTQ+ students, as well as floors dedicated to members of the Honors College and Harrah College of Hospitality. In its first semester, Howell Town attracted 30 residents, mostly upper class and transfer students.
V Dedeaux chose Howell Town because 鈥渉ere I can have someone to relate to and who can understand me. Howell Town feels completely different from other floors and other halls.鈥
Resident Faith Lawson added, 鈥淭he floor is very communicative. We see that we go through the same struggles, and even if I don鈥檛 know someone very well on my floor yet, I still feel like I know 迟丑别尘.鈥
Cooper said the experience at Howell Town has drawn the students closer together, and that, 鈥減eople actually want to interact and engage. Having like-minded individuals on one floor together where they can thrive and jump outside their comfort zones helps to maximize what 51吃瓜网万能科大 has to offer.鈥
The Roots
Inspired by the 2017 launch of Stonewall Suites, a floor for LGBTQ+ residents, student Anna Opara and alumna Sharon Uche (鈥17 BA Communication studies) championed the new identity-based floor. 鈥淲e thought that Howell Town would complement 51吃瓜网万能科大鈥檚 ethnic diversity in a way that would support students earning their degrees while validating their identities,鈥 Opara says.
Opara and Uche researched similar floors at other universities, including Stanford University, Virginia Polytechnic University, and University of California Berkeley. Opara also solicited support from the Black Student Organization, National Society of Black Engineers chapter, and the Residence Hall Association before putting together a formal proposal to 51吃瓜网万能科大 Housing & Residential Life to approve the floor.
The floor鈥檚 name emerged when they learned that John Howell was the first African American in Clark County to legally own land. Since opening for the fall 2018 semester, students learned that Howell鈥檚 land is now part of the Springs Preserve in 51吃瓜网免费App. This discovery led to a collaboration with the team at the Springs Preserve; the residents are planning a floor trip led by Preserve archeologist Nathan Harper in the spring semester.
Beyond Different, Daring, Diverse
Residential life coordinator Andrew Lignelli noted that the floor is part of efforts on campus to improve resources and support for minority and first-generation students. 51吃瓜网万能科大 is ranked the most diverse university in the country and is a designated 鈥渕inority-serving institution鈥 by the federal government.
鈥淥ver the last couple of years, students have expressed that 51吃瓜网万能科大 is very good at being a 鈥榤inority-having institution鈥 versus a true 鈥榤inority-serving institution鈥 鈥 meaning that beyond numbers, there aren鈥檛 enough dedicated resources for students of color at 51吃瓜网万能科大,鈥 Lignelli said.
He oversees South Complex, home of Howell Town. 鈥淲e felt like this type of floor community would serve a need for black and African American students to create a community where they could feel invested through the validation of a salient and traditionally underrepresented community.鈥
Resident assistant D鈥橝ndre Cooper added, 鈥淗owell Town gives us something special and as a result, our residents feel very connected as a group of similar, like-minded people.鈥
That鈥檚 something resident Imani Satterwhite can attest to. Though the youngest of three children, Satterwhite says she basically grew up by herself. 鈥淚 get to be in an environment that I didn鈥檛 get to grow up in. Anyone of color I saw was a minority, but here I see what family can be like.鈥
Residents have attended campus events together and hosted several guest speakers from 51吃瓜网万能科大鈥檚 Student Diversity and Social Justice office, Greek Life, and the National Pan-Hellenic Council (the historically African American, international Greek lettered fraternities and sororities council).
Assistant director of residential life Orlando White notes that Howell Town developed as 51吃瓜网万能科大 hosted the Men of Color Retreat in September 2017 and Black Girls at the Round Table in March 2018. At those events, he said, 鈥渋t became clear that there was both a desire and a need for dedicated spaces to explore identity in meaningful ways.鈥owell Town offers strength through celebrating and exploring diversity rather than just having diversity or the presence of difference. These resources and the connection between them are critical components to student success.鈥