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In The Margins

In The Margins

Von: Diverse Education
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Achieving equality in higher education. The stakes have never been higher. The issues never more complex. Who graduates, and why? Who is getting hired as faculty and what is their experience? In each episode, we will look at issues surrounding students, faculty, diversity and inclusion, and skyrocketing college costs. From critical conversation to news, numbers, and analysis — we've got you covered. You can count on Diverse's In The Margins to bring you the latest, most relevant thought leadership as it pertains to diversity, inclusion, and equity in higher education. As the national expert, we've been doing this for almost 40 years in print and on the web (diverseeducation.com). Now we are excited to expand the conversation via this podcast. We will tackle these topics, and more, head-on. Listen weekly for a mix of deep dives, short briefs, expert panels, interviews, and more. We are thrilled to bring it to you here, in In The Margins.2020 Politik & Regierungen
  • EP164: Leading Through Uncertainty: Dr. Emelyn dela Peña on Mission-Driven Higher Education
    Feb 19 2026
    In this episode we sit down with Dr. Emelyn dela Peña, President and CEO of NADOHE, for a timely conversation on leadership, mission clarity, and sustaining equity work in a rapidly shifting higher education landscape. Drawing from her personal journey growing up in a diverse Los Angeles community, navigating loss and economic transition, and building a decades-long career across institutions like Stanford, Harvard, and Loyola, dela Peña reflects on the formative experiences that shaped her commitment to access, belonging, and student success. She shares how moments of protest, community support, and witnessing institutional responses to crisis helped define her purpose as an educator and leader. The conversation, with In the Margins, host Ralph Newell, explores the current national climate surrounding diversity, equity, and inclusion work, including legal challenges, institutional overcorrections, and the growing role of fear in decision-making. And dela Peña emphasizes the importance of lawful, mission-driven leadership, deep listening, and centering those historically pushed to the margins. She also outlines her priorities as NADOHE's new president and CEO, including professional development, coalition building, and sustaining a community of practice for equity practitioners navigating uncertainty. At its core, this episode is a call to remain grounded in values, to support the people doing this work, and to remember that changing language should never mean changing commitments to fairness, representation, and opportunity. KEY POINTS: dela Peña's diverse upbringing shaped her commitment to inclusion Early advocacy experiences led her to a lifelong career in higher education The pandemic revealed hidden inequities and leadership blind spots Institutions must address structural barriers, not just surface-level access Fear and misinformation are driving institutional overcorrections Lawful, mission-driven leadership remains essential for equity work Compliance often means adapting programs, not eliminating them Eliminating DEI offices can result in loss of community and support systems Coalition building and cross-sector partnerships are key to sustaining the work Students and committed educators remain the greatest source of hope QUOTABLES: "It was such a wonderful experience to have grown up with all of that diversity… and to be welcomed by so many different kinds of families." — Dr. Emelyn dela Peña "There's always something under the surface that we need to think about when we are leaders of organizations." — Dr. Emelyn dela Peña "Our position has always been that we are committed to lawful mission-driven work." — Dr. Emelyn dela Peña "Our students give me hope… they demand that we live up to the things we say are important to us." — Dr. Emelyn dela Peña "If we shift language, we don't have to shift values." — Dr. Emelyn dela Peña RESOURCES: Emelyn A. dela Peña Named NADOHE President and CEO FOLLOW US ON SOCIAL MEDIA: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/The-EDU-Ledger X/Twitter: https://x.com/TheEDULedger Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheEDULedger Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/TheEDULedger Threads: https://www.threads.com/@TheEDULedger Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/TheEDULedger.bsky.social WATCH THIS VIDEO AND OTHERS ON OUR YOUTUBE CHANNEL: https://www.youtube.com/@TheEDULedger Closed captioning and a live show transcription are available in the video for this episode. In The Margins is produced by The EDU Ledger and edited by EPYC Media Network (visit at https://www.epyc.co/).
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    55 Min.
  • EP163: From Credentials to Skills: Rethinking Opportunity in the Modern Economy, with NSC CEO Brooke DeRenzis
    Feb 12 2026
    In this episode, The EDU Leger is excited to present the first in a series of content from our newest podcast partner, Discovering Your Mission with Dr. Mordecai. Tune in as Dr. Mordecai Brownlee welcomes guest Brooke DeRenzis, CEO of the National Skills Coalition, for a wide-ranging conversation on the future of work, skills-based hiring, and the evolving role of higher education in an economy defined by rapid change. Drawing on national policy leadership and personal lived experience, DeRenzis explores why skills: technical, digital, and durable have become the foundation of economic mobility and why credentials must evolve to reflect real workforce needs. Their conversation also examines the rise of working learners, including the growing importance of community and technical colleges and the urgent need to design education (and workforce systems) that support lifelong learning. At the center of the discussion is a clear message: workforce training is not a "second chance" system, but a first-choice investment in people, communities, and national prosperity. From skills-based hiring and workforce to equity, policy implementation, and student voice, this episode offers a human-centered, policy-informed look at how investing in skills is essential to building a more inclusive and resilient economy. KEY POINTS: Skills are the foundation of economic mobility in today's workforce Credentials should validate skills, not act as barriers to opportunity Working learners are now central to the future of higher education Community and technical colleges play a critical role in workforce advancement Skills training should be treated as a first-choice investment, not a fallback option Skills-based hiring expands talent pipelines and reduces inequities Continuous learning and upskilling are essential in an AI-driven economy Equity must be embedded into the workforce and education policy design Student voice and lived experience are critical to effective policy implementation QUOTABLES: "Jobs that require skills training are the backbone of our economy." – Brooke DeRenzis "The answer, increasingly, is found in skills and opportunity and in systems that are designed to lift people, not leave them behind." – Dr. Mordecai Brownlee "Higher education has always played a key role in unlocking opportunity and shared prosperity." – Brooke DeRenzis "Ninety-two percent of all jobs require at least one digital skill." – Brooke DeRenzis "Everyone deserves an investment in their potential." – Brooke DeRenzis GUEST RESOURCES: Brooke DeRenzis - National Skills Coalition ItsDrMordecai.com - Official Website of Dr. Mordecai Ian Brownlee FOLLOW US ON SOCIAL MEDIA: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/The-EDU-Ledger X/Twitter: https://x.com/TheEDULedger Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheEDULedger Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/TheEDULedger Threads: https://www.threads.com/@TheEDULedger Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/TheEDULedger.bsky.social WATCH THIS VIDEO AND OTHERS ON OUR YOUTUBE CHANNEL: https://www.youtube.com/@TheEDULedger Closed captioning and a live show transcription are available in the video for this episode. In The Margins is produced by The EDU Ledger and edited by EPYC Media Network (visit at https://www.epyc.co/).
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    29 Min.
  • EP162: Sustaining HBCUs Beyond the Moment: Inside UNCF's Transformation Strategy
    Jan 29 2026
    In this episode of In The Margins, we are joined by Julian Thompson, Senior Director for Strategy Development, and Rev. Dr. Darryl Ann Lai Fang, Assistant Vice President for Transformation Support at the UNCF Institute for Capacity Building, for a deep dive into what long-term sustainability truly requires for HBCUs. As the institute approaches its 20th anniversary, Thompson and Dr. Lai Fang reflect on how UNCF's work has evolved from discrete technical assistance to a holistic, networked transformation model designed to help institutions move from survival to sustained impact. Their conversation with The EDU Ledger host David Pluviose explores executive leadership stability, board governance, data-informed decision-making, and why collaboration (not isolation) is now essential in a volatile political and economic landscape. From change management and presidential support to career pathways, accreditation-aligned initiatives, and the future role of AI in higher education, this episode offers a candid, experience-driven look at how HBCUs can strengthen their foundations without losing their mission. KEY POINTS The founding and evolution of the UNCF Institute for Capacity Building as UNCF's innovation arm Why discrete solutions fail, and how holistic transformation drives sustainability The impact of leadership turnover and the urgent need for board governance alignment Findings from UNCF's Stable Leadership report and what it reveals about presidential tenure How networked approaches are replacing siloed decision-making across HBCUs Why institutions are seeking UNCF partnerships beyond funding alone Career pathways, accreditation, and embedding transformation into institutional DNA The next frontier: data strategy, AI readiness, and multiple revenue streams for HBCUs QUOTABLES "HBCUs are a miracle in a certain way — in terms of the way that they've been able to sustain with limited resources and still deliver transcendent value." – Julian Thompson "Instead of focusing on what institutions do not have, we changed our language to: what can the institution do with what they have?" – Rev. Dr. Darryl Ann Lai Fang "We're basically waking up every day thinking about the future of HBCUs … about the systems, the policies, the approaches, the partnerships, the technologies, the communities of practice, the cultures, the ways of being that can help HBCUs get to a place where their long-term sustainability is assured." – Julian Thompson "We cannot continue working as if we are independent. There are healthy dependencies that we need to create." Rev. Dr. Darryl Ann Lai Fang GUEST RESOURCES: UNCF Report Reveals HBCU Presidents Serve Nearly Two Years Less Than National Average | The EDU Ledger FOLLOW US ON SOCIAL MEDIA: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/The-EDU-Ledger X/Twitter: https://x.com/TheEDULedger Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheEDULedger Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/TheEDULedger Threads: https://www.threads.com/@TheEDULedger Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/TheEDULedger.bsky.social WATCH THIS VIDEO AND OTHERS ON OUR YOUTUBE CHANNEL: https://www.youtube.com/@TheEDULedger Closed captioning and a live show transcription are available in the video for this episode. In The Margins is produced by The EDU Ledger and edited by EPYC Media Network (visit at https://www.epyc.co/).
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    42 Min.
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