Category Archives: News

Building networks – Becoming mentors

Think Globally, Join Locally

AAUW has an amazing mission!

AAUW’s Mission: To advance gender equity for women and girls through research, education, and advocacy.

I’m pretty busy with work and family.  And I’m not old, but I’m getting there.  When I look at that Mission, I can’t help but think, “Mission impossible.  I need a nap.” One day, some day, we will have gender equality.  But is there something – something a tad less intimidating – that I can do today?

Well…I have a lot of wisdom and experience, and I like sharing it with anyone who could benefit.  I like meeting people who share their stories as well.  I like connecting people when they have something in common.  And I like to chat over coffee.  Could that help the mission?

Can a friendly chat over coffee drive our mission?  I think so.  Let me explain…

As a young woman filled with energy and enthusiasm, (and perhaps a bit of righteous anger), I thought of AAUW and women’s advocacy solely in terms of STEM projects and political causes.  Now, I see something of a deeper purpose – to focus on building a wide network of local women who actively check in on each other.  If that network is strong, then advocacy will follow. 

Importantly, when we learn more about each other, we build more connections.  When doing so, it is easier to identify potential ‘best fit’ mentors for young women (or men!) seeking advice for either pursuing their career or dealing with the challenges that come along with it.

If you live or work in or around the Raleigh-Wake County area and that kind of networking and mentoring sound good to you, please consider joining our Branch.  Keep up with our Tarheel Branch as well!  The Tarheel Branch is our statewide, virtual branch for NC.

Pandemic inertia is real, and we’re all still recovering.  We need your energy to help us get the ball rolling again.  And when it does…watch out below!

Looking forward to coffee,

Lisa Lowe, Raleigh-Wake County (NC) Branch member and grateful AAUW Fellowship recipient

Please Consider a Donation in Honor of the Legacy of Ann Chipley

The Legacy of Ann Chipley

AAUW NC invites all members and branches to support the AAUW Educational Foundation endowment, honoring the late Ann Chipley. A past president of AAUW NC, she was one of our few state leaders who made the transition to an AAUW national leader, and at the time of her death in 1996, she was the AAUW Director of Public Policy. For a profile of this state and national leader, see http://bit.ly/thn-chipley99 .
Following her death the AAUW Educational Foundation Board set up an endowment in Chipley’s name to support AAUW Fellowships. We in AAUW NC are working very hard to reach the $100,000 goal ($9,000 left to go!) by May 2017 – the deadline when the fellowship funds in her name expire. Many of our current AAUW members never knew Ann Chipley. She was an active member of the Rocky Mount branch, and our state president in1980-82. However, there are those in our branches who do remember Ann as an outstanding leader and force to advance the AAUW public policy program.
To get a glimpse of this woman, please take a few minutes to read an excerpt from her address to the women at the New York State convention in 1987, printed on the back page 8 of this
newsletter. Should you wish to extend her legacy through the American Fellowship scholarships program, you can do so online at http://aauwnc.org/donate-chipley .
Article taken with permission from Tar Heel News

Presentation by Karen (Galloway) Bethea-Shields

Karen_speaking

Karen (Galloway) Bethea-Shields

Our February program featured an informative, sometimes challenging and often entertaining talk by the Honorable Karen Bethea-Shields. Bethea-Shields broke a number of barriers during her career as attorney and judge. Her first case as a freshly-minted lawyer was later called “The Trial of the Century,” i.e., the Joan Little case involving the murder of an abusive jailer. Before she was 30 years old, this young lawyer (then named Galloway) became Durham’s first female judge.

Our speaker’s story tracked the issues raised and in part resolved by both the civil rights and the women’s movements. Despite the fact that Bethea-Shields was often “on trial as much as her client was,” she made a point of being engaged in civic and cultural concerns instead of seeing her career as merely a personal journey. She lives by a creed that “If you’re only in it for yourself, you’re wasting your time.” With this as her guiding principle, she has enjoyed being a lawyer and continues to practice.

We heard from our speaker some of the most difficult but enduring truths that any of us has heard in recent years. To paraphrase, she said that integration has not yet happened. Instead, one race was assimilated into the cultural practices of another. She left us with the thought that mutual respect must precede any meaningful blending of cultures and ethnicities.

— Terry Wall

Chocolate for Change! AAUW is represented at NCSU’s annual Chocolate Festival.

On Friday, September 27 from 4 to 7pm, Friends of the Women’s Center—an NC State Foundation Fund—presented the 10th Annual Chocolate Festival. Four members of the Raleigh/Wake branch of AAUW were there: Barbara Ann Hughes, president; Denny McGuire, state treasurer; Terry Wall, membership; and Janet Weber, branch treasurer.

Chocolate flowed freely from a fountain and tables were lined with samples of truffles, decadent chocolate cakes and raspberry cream cradled by a shell of melt-in-your mouth milk chocolate.

The Chocolate Festival isn’t just about chocolate, however. It’s also about women—especially safeguarding women’s health with early detection of breast cancer. Attendees were provided with information about resources for women, including especially the prevention and treatment of breast cancer. AAUW was there not only in support of women’s health, but also to promote the optimal development of women all over the globe!

Festival guests were promised they could:

  • Learn more about breast cancer and other’s women’s issues. (Our literature addressed the salary gap and the presence of women in math and science careers.)
  • Find a special gift for someone at the silent auction
  • Purchase—and eat—quality chocolate from some of the Triangle’s finest vendors.

We happily informed undergraduates that their campus Women’s Center is a university affiliate of AAUW.  That means they enjoy free membership and get all the benefits thereof simply by staying in touch with educational exhibits and programs at the campus center.  

Advanced undergraduates and graduate students eagerly accepted our brochures about the Grants and Fellowships that are available on a competitive basis every year.  We invited faculty and staff to either affiliate with the center or come to our meetings on third Tuesdays at the Center for Community Leadership.  Several people signed up to get our emailed invitations to future meetings. On the whole, we were very glad we participated and will do so again in the future.

The annual Chocolate Festival is a fund-raiser for the NC State Women’s Center with a portion of the proceeds going to Breast Cancer Education and the Kay Yow/WBCA Cancer Fund.

 

Meeting October 15, 2013

Susanna K. Gibbons,

Employment Law Attorney and Partner with Poyner & Spruill,

will speak on

Understanding Workplace Culture:  Implementing best practices to prevent discrimination and injustice

Tuesday, October 15, 2013
Center for Community Leadership
711 Hillsborough St. Room #104 (map)
5:15 – 7:00

Light refreshments served at 5:15. Program starts at 5:30.

The Center for Community Leadership is in the Junior League of Raleigh buidling. There is parking behind the building — enter from St. Mary’s St.

For more information about the speaker, please click: Gibbons-Susanna_2013

The AAUW Raleigh Chapter Hits Home Run With its First Study Circle on Bullying

It was the biggest event of the year for the Raleigh North Carolina Chapter of the American Association of University Women.  AAUW Raleigh chapter members hosted a study circle on bullying at East Wake Middle School on Tuesday evening, May 1.  About 80 people attended including parents, teachers, students and AAUW Raleigh chapter members.

Terry Wall is the key organizer and was encouraged by the positive community response.  “This was our first study circle on bullying but we were delighted with the animated discussions and the group brainstorming that followed.  We now feel even more hopeful AAUW can help eradicate this worrying problem in American schools.”

School Bullying in America and North Carolina

School bullying is a growing problem in America where estimates say 13 million children are likely to be bullied this year alone.  Other estimates say 3 million children miss school each month due to fears of ongoing bullying.  And North Carolina schools aren’t immune.  North Carolina schools are so concerned about bullying they passed an anti-bullying law in 2009.  Extreme bullying has resulted in catastrophic events such as a 10-year-old hanging himself last fall.  And a 2005 study conducted by the Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network concluded that North Carolina students were a third more likely than other American students to be bullied.

How the AAUW Study Circle Helps

Being there at the East Wake Middle School confirmed for AAUW members that educating school communities on how to deal with bullying is one of the strongest responses. Nancy Allen, East Wake Middle School principal started the May 1st discussion by sharing her own story. “I was bullied.  And when I hear of other people being bullied, it hurts,” she said.

Ms. Allen showed the group the trailer for the new movie; “Bully.”  This showed intense bullying scenes on a school bus and talked about a boy so desperate enough to end bullying he took his own life.

Later, in the media room, AAUW branch members facilitated smaller discussion groups.  Children talked about their own experiences. Others confided what prevents them from speaking about bullying and parents brainstormed on how to ensure their children are safe.

Here are some of the findings that resulted: 

  • Bullying is most likely to occur on the school bus.  In one group 5 out of five children said they only see bullying on the school bus
  • Between classes bullying is more likely to occur.
  • Language barriers is one deterrent for children reporting bullying.  One child said he doesn’t believe there is a word for “bullying” in Spanish.  He also said his mother wouldn’t feel comfortable talking with the principal or teachers in English.

Here are some potential solutions that arose:

  • Each school must strongly define what bullying means so everyone is clear when that boundary is crossed
  • Parents must check in with their child daily, asking if they felt threatened or uncomfortable
  • Having a volunteer monitor on each school bus (such as a parent) is worth exploring as a deterrent
  • Students must report any situation where they felt bullied or witnessed bullying to the principal directly

  • Continue open and free conversation about bullying

  • Ensure non-English speaking parents are aware school translation services exist

The study circle concluded with students reading poems about bullying.  Ms Allen alerted all the next anti-bullying event at East Wake Middle School is on August 3 when the parents of one of the children who committed suicide and was depicted in “Bully” will come speak.  She thanked the AAUW again for hosting such a helpful and meaningful event and encouraged the AAUW Raleigh chapter to continue hosting a similar study circles elsewhere. “We have a problem and together we will solve it,” the principal said.