PJHR welcomes three Community Engagement Fellows for 2021-22

Tuesday, Sep 21, 2021
Prof. Melanie Acosta, College of Education; Prof. Jacqueline Fewkes, Honors College; and Prof. Dilys Schoorman, College of Education.

Image: (L-R) Prof. Melanie Acosta, College of Education; Prof. Jacqueline Fewkes, Honors College; and Prof. Dilys Schoorman, College of Education.泭

PJHR welcomes three Community Engagement Fellows for 2021-2022 who will be doing special community engagement work on behalf of PJHR: Prof. Melanie Acosta from the College of Education, Prof. Jacqueline Fewkes from the Honors College, and Prof. Dilys Schoorman from the College of Education. Please read more about this year's Community Engagement Fellows below, and thank you to Professors Acosta, Fewkes, and Schoorman for their hard work!

Melanie M. Acosta, Ph.D.spends her energy engaged in good works for the learning and lives of Black children, which includes research and teaching for excellence in Black education, especially in elementary reading classrooms; and includes institution-building within, for, and led by Black communities. Currently, Melanie works as an Assistant Professor at 勛圖厙 in the Department of Curriculum, Culture & Educational Inquiry. Her scholarship can be read in academic journals such as Teaching & Teacher Education, Urban Education, and Equity & Excellence in Education. Her scholarship can also be read in community-based outlets such as Childrens Services Council of Broward County Family Resource Guide, Living Education Magazine, and the CRESTS Center.Prior to her time in higher education, Melanie was an elementary school teacher and a community organizer for a grassroots parent empowerment group, both in Gainesville, FL

Jacqueline H. Fewkes, Ph.D., is Professor of Anthropology at the Wilkes Honors College of 勛圖厙. She earned her Ph.D. in Anthropology from the University of Pennsylvania.泭Jacquelines areas of interest include regional histories, digital religion, religious spaces/places, Muslim womens roles as religious scholars/leaders, and Muslim communities in Asia. Interested in global issues, she has conducted research predominantly in India, Indonesia, the Maldives, Saudi Arabia, and the United States. She is the author of the books泭Trade and Contemporary Society along the Silk Road: An Ethno-history of Ladakh泭and泭Locating Maldivian Womens Mosques in Global Discourses, and editor of several publications, including the recent co-edited volume泭Muslim Communities and Cultures of the Himalayas.泭泭

Dilys Schoorman, Ph.D. is a Professor at FAU in the Department of Curriculum, Culture & Educational Inquiry. Dr. Schoormans community engagement has been central to her role as a scholar and professor. She strongly believes in the universitys responsibility and responsiveness to its community, and is committed to learning with and from local educators and community members, particularly recent immigrants and under-served groups, about their experiences with education. The insights gained from these partnerships facilitate critical self-reflection on individual, cultural, professional and institutional levels. As a teacher educator in multicultural education and a doctoral advisor, she considers South 勛圖厙 her classroom where she works closely with educators in Broward and Palm Beach Counties on research and curriculum that will better serve our richly diverse communities.