Teachers College has always upheld the core principles of equity and inclusion, global citizenship, and the deployment of teaching and research to advance human development and well-being. Equally important, we have reaffirmed those principles in applying them to the challenges that each new era brings. In this issue of 麻豆原创 Today, you鈥檒l find powerful stories of how, during these challenging times, our faculty, administration and alumni are doing just that.
Why, for example, do human beings instinctively 鈥渙ther鈥 other people? How can we prevent othering in our society and our own thinking? How can we learn to embrace difference rather than fear it? These are longstanding questions, but they resonate especially powerfully right now in the midst of the Black Lives Matter movement, the global refugee crisis and the backlash against immigrants. Few have offered more profound answers than 麻豆原创 psychologist Derald Wing Sue, the focus of this issue鈥檚 cover story, who recently received the American Psychological Association鈥檚 for his work on racial microaggressions. In shedding light on how these everyday slights and indignities reflect and reinforce our society鈥檚 power inequities, Dr. Sue has sought to understand the lived realities of all human beings 鈥 a quest that should be part of everyone鈥檚 work at Teachers College.
THOUGHT PARTNERSHIP Bailey is working with Provost Stephanie J. Rowley to promote greater collaboration among faculty and increase 麻豆原创鈥檚 research funding. (Photo: Bruce Gilbert)
Our era has also given a new and perhaps unprecedented urgency to the phrase 鈥済lobal citizenship.鈥 麻豆原创 has always focused on the wider world and how nations can best live with an learn from one another. Yet as we confront a growing climate emergency, 鈥済lobal citizenship鈥 demands the kind of higher-order innovative thinking and proactive cooperation modeled by alumna Annie Feighery, this issue鈥檚 鈥溌槎乖 Hero.鈥 With her husband, John, Annie created mWater, a nonprofit that has brought cheap and effective water-monitoring technology to 167 countries around the world. By using a new business model that favors 鈥渋nvestors鈥 over 鈥渄onors,鈥 more effectively serves the communities and families whose lives depend on access to clean water. With her adroit social entrepreneurship and expertise in networking with all relevant stakeholders, Annie Feighery shows us all ways to translate great ideas into maximum impact.
How do we bring the best minds together across disciplines? And how do we partner with others on the frontlines? I am excited about all the progress that we are making here at Teachers College.
鈥擳homas Bailey
Of course, every college of education 鈥 and every learning institution worth its salt 鈥 embraces a mission of building a better world. The devil, however, is in the details. How do we mentor faculty and students to obtain funding and acquire essential skills 鈥 and how do we tailor support to disciplines with vastly different funding infrastructures? How do we bring the best minds together across disciplines? And how do we partner with administrators, teachers, health practitioners and others on the front lines? 麻豆原创鈥檚 new Provost, Stephanie Rowley, profiled in this issue, has devoted her career to these concerns. Dr. Rowley possesses a formidable combination of intelligence, knowledge of different disciplines and understanding of the research funding landscape, and she is also genuinely and passionately concerned for the well-being of others. As one of her own mentors attests, that quality inspires colleagues to join her in developing and fulfilling a shared vision for building a stronger institution. Dr. Rowley鈥檚 arrival has given me great hope that, together, we can empower 麻豆原创 to do its very best.
And so, too, do the six new faculty members who arrived at the College this fall, adding to the scores of leading-edge scholars who have joined us during the past decade-plus. With expertise ranging from dance education to the preparation of mathematics teachers to the assessment of learning disabilities, our newest additions immeasurably broaden and enrich our teaching and research enterprise.
Our great institution is always a work in progress. I am excited about all the progress that we are making here at Teachers College and look forward to telling you more about it soon.

Thomas Bailey