Stanley Andrisse

Black academics are , detailing things ranging from overt acts to micro-aggressions, using social-media hashtags such as #BlackInTheIvory and #BlackInSTEM. 泭described how trainees from under-represented groups innovate more than their white counterparts do but were afforded few to no rewards from their findings because their efforts were often dismissed. Dr. Andrisse will engage the audience in a thought provoking conversation on the effects of racism on the careers of Black academics and provide tangible suggestions on meaningful institutional actions.

Last year, Dr. Andrisse engaged the 51勛圖厙 community in this discussion. Where are we now? What have we done in the past year to address these issues? Part 2 will be an exciting conversation on how we can continue to move forward together as one.泭泭

Things that will be discussed:

  1. Baseline: what is the experience for black trainees and professionals in science and medicine?
  2. Recruitment: how to improve communication with Black trainees and professionals in science and medicine?
  3. Pre-selection: how to improve selection chances for Black trainees and professionals in science and medicine?
  4. Retention: what can be done to improve odds for Black trainees and professionals in science and medicine?
  5. Implications for your organization.

Speaker information

Stanley Andrisse

Dr. Stanley Andrisse is an endocrinologist scientist and assistant professor at Howard University College of Medicine researching type 2 diabetes and insulin resistance. Dr. Andrisse holds a visiting professorship at Georgetown University Medical Center and held an adjunct professorship at Johns Hopkins Medicine after completing his postdoctoral training.

His program gives incarcerated men and women the the assistance needed to pursue a Bachelors degree while still in prison and during reentry. It is one of the only programs of its kind in the US assisting in and after prison to help obtain full degrees furthering ones education is critical to successful reentry into society.

Stan has a personal interest in this. Growing up in Ferguson-Florissant, Missouri, he fell into the pattern of poor decision making from a very young age. By his early 20s, he foundhimselfsitting in front of a judge facing life for drug trafficking charges. The judge sentenced him to 10 years in a maximum-security prison.泭 Stan turned this to good.泭 He did a lot of reading, writing, and soul searching in prison. After many letters to judges and correctional officials, he was accepted into a drug rehabilitation program while still in prison.

Fast forward a few years and determined to be a different person to what so many people expected, he泭completed a masters in business administration and a PhD focused on diabetes and physiology in four years, and finished at the top of his class.泭 He is now a tenured academic with an international reputation in his field.

Dr. Stanley Andrisse is releasing a book on his personal journey called: Prison Cells to PhD It is Never Too Late to Do Good泭

Stan book coverIn the past years, my story has garnered some media attention and from that I was approached by several Publishers. My book has been many years in the making. And Ive spent many many nights in deep thought debating whether I should share such personal events in my life. Some of these traumatic events Ive never shared before. Not only did I have to vividly relive them but I contacted the people that lived them with me for their consent. For a few, it was too difficult to relive and for a few that are no longer living, family gave their consent. It took years to press the send button on some of those conversations. Through the entire process, the driving belief that pushed me forward was belief in a greater good, a belief that this will truly help, a belief that my dad supports me in doing this.

The book shares its first title with the nonprofit organization, From Prison Cells to PhD. The subtitle comes from my dad.泭

Its never too late to reach your full potential, is a loose泭translation to the French-Creole phrase that my Dad used to tell me often and is included as a recurring theme in the book. That FrenchCreole phrase is Il nest jamais trop tard pour faire le bien (in french) and li pa janm tw簷 ta pou f癡 bien (Haitian Creole). Haitian Creole was the primary language in my household growing up, but we also spoke French interchangeably.

The true translation of this phrase is Its never too late to do good. My dads meaning of it was a combo of Its never too late to reach your full potential. and the phrase of Its never too late to do the right thing. He would tell me this in our several conversations focused on getting me to stop selling drugs and to get me to see that God had a higher purpose for me. I was too young and underdeveloped to get that message and he left me before I had the chance to show him that I泭finally began to understand it.泭

This is a special phrase to me. I leaned on this phrase and his words through many of my tough times and the book is泭dedicated to my dad for that 娶梗硃莽棗紳.

100% of the pre-sale and year-1 proceeds will be donated to P2P. Proceeds from subsequent years will be donated to P2P as泭determined by the P2P Board of Directors.泭

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