Reaching out to the community Shireen K. Lewis Ph.D. '98


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Nurturer: Lewis,
above, center, with mentorees
Photo: © Molly Roberts |
When Shireen Lewis entered grade school
in Trinidad and Tobago, her country was in its early years of
independence from Great Britain. Fortunately, it had a leader
who acted on the maxim that educating its young people was essential
to a successful future for the young Caribbean nation.
An oil boom provided money for the country's schools and Prime
Minister Eric Williams, himself a Ph.D. in economics from the
University of Oxford, provided an example that would inspire
young people like Lewis. She grew up wanting to earn a Ph.D.,
because, she says, "It represented a university's highest
degree."
She also grew up with something equally important to achieving
that goal--the high expectations of a nurturing community that
showed her how group support can be a key ingredient in individual
success.
Years later, after undergraduate work at Rutgers University's
Douglass College, a law degree from the University of Virginia,
two years as a corporate litigator in New York City, and coursework
at Duke for her doctorate in French, she found herself facing
that ultimate and often lonely test of academic life--writing
her dissertation.
"Dissertation writing is an alienating, isolating process," she
says. At some point, almost every doctoral candidate faces the
question, "Why am I doing this?" As a result, many
never finish their degree.
Lewis says she, too, found herself bogging down, "So I woke
up one morning and decided to do something about it."
She was living in Washington and knew a number of other women
of color who were doctoral candidates. She called several of
them and suggested they get together at Sisterspace & Books,
a store focusing on books by and about African-American women.
They met and hammered out ground rules for a support group that
would focus not on socializing but on setting goals and finishing
the dissertation.
Eight years later, SisterMentors has some two dozen "graduates." They
represent a wide range of fields and a diverse group of institutions.
But they have one thing in common--a sense of gratitude to Lewis
and to SisterMentors. SisterMentors now operates as part of EduSeed,
a nonprofit organization committed to promoting the values of
education among traditionally disadvantaged and underserved communities.
Lewis serves as executive director of EduSeed and continues her
involvement in SisterMentors.
New women continue to come into the group. They meet regularly
to report on progress, to set goals, to write, and to read and
critique each other's work. Lewis says it makes for "a rich
session," when women from all disciplines are reading a
scholar's work.
In recent years, SisterMentors has begun to reach out through
EduSeed to girls of color in middle schools and high schools,
promoting the value of education, and showing them that by setting
goals and persevering they, too, can aspire to academic success,
even to a university's highest degree.
www.sistermentors.org
--Sara Engram
Engram is a freelance writer based in Baltimore.
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