The efforts of three members of the University of Virginia community – a student, a faculty member and an administrator – have gone a long way in changing the culture to reflect diversity, offer equity and promote inclusion in sustainable ways.
Darius Carter, a Ph.D. candidate in UVA Engineering’s Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering; Susan Kools, associate dean for diversity and inclusion in the School of Nursing; and Tabitha Smith, the Title IX coordinator who also became director of compliance and inclusion at UVA-Wise, were recently selected to receive John T. Casteen III Diversity-Equity-Inclusion Leadership Awards.
These recipients are role models who take ideas and conversations and turn them into action, their nominators wrote. Their efforts to create and enhance a sense of community that promotes and supports diversity, equity and inclusion have led to the formation of new groups and programs in their respective schools to make lasting change – from the Grounds to Southwest Virginia.
The award recipients also acknowledged, as Kools put it, “so many colleagues and students [who] have been deeply engaged in the work to dismantle racism and its devastating impact on health, well-being, education and even life itself.”
The University’s Division for Diversity, Equity and Inclusion established the Casteen Award in 2010 – with President Emeritus Casteen being the first recipient – to recognize people making a significant impact on transforming the climate on Grounds.
Last year was the first time three people were awarded, and this year, the selection of a UVA-Wise employee is a first.
A closer look at the winners:
Darius Carter, Engineering
Darius Carter is a Ph.D. candidate in UVA Engineering’s Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering. (Photo by Sarah Nerrette)
Carter, who earned his undergraduate degree from UVA Engineering in 2017, plans to complete his Ph.D. in mechanical and aerospace engineering this summer.
Passionate about research in fluid mechanics and unmanned aerial and underwater vehicles, he is just as enthusiastic about enhancing the culture, especially for underrepresented minorities, in the Engineering School and in the academic profession.
Carter has made an impact on the national level, working with the National Society of Black Engineers since he was an undergraduate and up until recently, at one point serving as membership chair for the organization, which has more than 20,000 members.
His undergraduate experience was positive, but he “didn’t see too many professors who looked like me,” Carter said recently in an online interview. “I wanted to develop community in the department and among other Black students.”
He noted that graduate work can sometimes make a student feel isolated. Carter has sought to emphasize collaborative projects and participate in initiatives for underrepresented students in engineering and make their voices heard, he said. With that in mind, he co-founded the mechanical and aerospace engineering department’s Graduate Student Board and has served as its recruitment chair. He’s also a member of the Link Lab, a multi-departmental research space in the Engineering School.
Carter participated in the Black Graduate & Professional Student Organization at UVA, serving as co-president, and in GRIT – the Graduate Recruitment Initiative Team – as co-chair for the Engineering School. He also chaired a departmental task force to increase diversity among the faculty and students, called the DRIVE program (focusing on diversity, respect, inclusion, vision and equity) this past year. He presented the group’s findings and recommendations at two departmental town-hall style gatherings.