Of the 1,058 professors identified in SU’s 2017 Faculty Salary Report, 73% were white. In interviews with The Daily Orange, faculty members across six SU schools and colleges who come from racially and ethnically underrepresented backgrounds said that their identities can impact their interactions with different groups on campus, particularly students.
Just under 57% of SU’s undergraduate student body is white, according to SU’s fall 2018 census. SU is considered a predominantly white institution because white people account for more than 50 percent of the student enrollment, according to M. Christopher Brown II and T. Elon Dancy II’s paper in the Encyclopedia of African American Education.
Incidents like what happened to Hurst-Wahl two decades ago aren’t a thing of the past. Santee Frazier, a professional writing instructor in the writing studies, rhetoric, and composition department of the College of Arts and Sciences, was sitting in a lecture hall less than three years ago as part of a consulting job when a student said there was no reason to talk about the Native American experience because “there are none of them around anymore.”
No other professors in the room corrected the student or said anything in response to that comment, which surprised Frazier. A citizen of the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma, Frazier was one of only a few other Native American people in the room at the time, he said.
Frazier may be one of the only Native American professors his students have in their college careers, he said. Just one professor in SU’s 2017 faculty report identified as “American Indian.”
“A lot of people see me as ‘other’ sort of right away,” he said.