Executive Summary
There is a clear connection between the practice of liberal education and the conduct of democracy. Recent disinvestment in education and anti-liberal forces coincide with an erosion of democratic norms in the United States and internationally. The challenges of college access among underrepresented populations and a dwindling faith in the kind of education necessary for democratic life are helping drive the global frenzy of anti-democratic sentiment. Bard College seeks to address the urgent challenges of democracy and education through innovative practice and advocacy that recognizes the importance of the arts in expression and dissent, and creates the first global, independent, sustainable undergraduate and graduate educational network. The future of democracy requires redefining higher education for the 21st century. Bard’s record of success in the West Bank, Kyrgyzstan, Hungary, China, and urban centers in the US demonstrates the broader potential of this approach to transform lives and communities.
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2021 Swift Grant Awardee
Bard College was selected as a 2021 Swift Grant awardee in partnership with the University of Waterloo. The Swift Grants fund provides small grants to Bold Solutions Network members for collaborative projects.
The two universities will expand their online Worldwide Teach-In on Climate and Justice to engage students and faculty members from all disciplines in underserved countries in Africa. The project aims to reach more than 200,000 students from over 100 countries to learn about climate change, climate solutions, and climate justice.
2022 & 2021 Swift Grant Awardee
Bard College was selected as a 2021 Swift Grant awardee in partnership with the University of Waterloo. The Swift Grants fund provides small grants to Bold Solutions Network members for collaborative projects.
The two universities will expand their online Worldwide Teach-In on Climate and Justice in March to engage students and faculty members from all disciplines in underserved countries in Africa. The project aims to reach more than 200,000 students from over 100 countries to learn about climate change, climate solutions, and climate justice.
2022 Swift Grant Awardee
Bard College was selected as a 2022 Swift Grant awardee in partnership with the University of Waterloo. The Swift Grants fund provides small grants to Bold Solutions Network members for collaborative projects.
The two universities will expand their online Worldwide Teach-In on Climate and Justice in March 2023 to engage students and faculty members from all disciplines in underserved countries in Africa. The project aims to reach more than 200,000 students from over 100 countries to learn about climate change, climate solutions, and climate justice.
Accomplishments
On August 30, 2023, the newest Bard High School Early College (BHSEC), a collaboration among the City of New York Department of Education, Montefiore/Albert Einstein College of Medicine, and Bard College opened as a science-focused public high school where students can earn an associate degree from Bard, tuition free, alongside their New York State Regents diploma.
The new BHSEC in the Bronx builds on more than 20 years of successful partnership between Bard College and the City of New York. Responding to local community demand for outstanding public education options has led Bard to open additional early college campuses in Queens, Newark, Cleveland, New Orleans, the Hudson Valley, Baltimore, and Washington, DC. More than 95 percent of BHSEC students, the majority of whom are first-generation college students and Pell eligible, graduate from high school with at least one year of tuition-free college credit from Bard.
COVID-19 Response
The need for Bard’s project, Addressing the Crisis of Democracy through a Global Higher Education Network, is not only greater during a pandemic or any world-wide crisis but also can be met by the organic and nimble nature of the project itself. Our close and creative approach to education is informing our development of new and effective ways to teach and support our students and engage with our communities across the world, even as we adapt to this crisis and its impact on higher education. We would revise the budget to include greater resources for high-quality connected learning, such as additional staff to assist all faculty with technology, more in-depth and continued training for faculty among all partners, and the purchase of new equipment and the upgrade of current equipment. A global higher education network as envisioned by Bard College and its partners has already mitigated risks as, even in the most perilous of times, it fosters critical thinking, open intellectual inquiry, and fact-based research, educates students to address tomorrow’s global challenges by getting to know other societies from the inside and expands access to higher education at a time of growing inequities in order to cultivate a new generation of globally engaged citizens and create new pathways for underserved communities into higher education.
Racial and Ethnic Injustice Response
Bard’s commitment to bringing higher education to marginalized communities in support of democratic values is embedded in its history, from Bard’s welcoming of over 300 Hungarian student freedom fighters in 1956 to its current work with students in inner cities, prisons, and other populations where social, financial, and political barriers limit access to learning. Bard’s Council on Inclusive Excellence takes a grassroots approach to guiding the College’s diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts, including a new mentoring program for minority staff and a student-initiated project to examine the role of socioeconomic status and class at Bard. The College also has both a Dean and a Vice President for Inclusive Excellence and a multi-faith chaplain cohort, who facilitate inclusive planning throughout the college’s programs. The college’s Office of Access & Equity Programs provides services and support, including dedicated scholarships, to disadvantaged students. Bard’s Center for Civic Engagement initiatives have been effective in hiring and elevating faculty and leaders of color as well as faculty and leadership who reflect the communities that we aim to serve. We will build on this track record, with a strong commitment to giving historically underrepresented leaders and local voices real authority in the distribution of resources and in programmatic strategy. Similarly, Bard’s strategy of sustaining international programs through partnerships with local institutions of higher education – rather than by establishing independent branch campuses not closely tied to local entities –furthers this commitment and ensures that local voices are integrated into the foundation of our programs from inception.