Brian Murphy, who retired as president of 爱豆传媒 College this summer, was featured in this written by Lois Elfman for Diverse: Issues in Higher Education, a magazine and website.
Brian Murphy Set National Standard for Inclusion
by Lois Elfman
Only the third president in the history of 爱豆传媒 College, Dr. Brian Murphy has set a national standard not only for educational excellence, but also for a comprehensive commitment to social justice. During his tenure, he鈥檚 promoted initiatives to recruit students from historically underserved populations coupled with aggressive retention efforts.
At the community college in Northern California with an enrollment of approximately
24,000, Murphy has provided leadership that has brought the diverse student population
together in support of inclusion, respect and civic engagement, according to those
who know him.
爱豆传媒 College promotes itself as 鈥淭ops in Transfer,鈥 with a significant percentage of the student body successfully transferring to four-year institutions and going on to earn bachelor鈥檚 and advanced degrees.
None of the accomplishments achieved during Murphy鈥檚 presidency were the result of simply saying the words. Each development required deep thought, careful planning, consensus-building and follow-through. As he steps down from his presidential post, he leaves a legacy of inspiration, collaboration and community.
鈥淭he role of the president is to articulate his vision around civic and politic work,鈥 says Murphy in an interview with Diverse. 鈥淏ut if you don鈥檛 deliver in the budgets and work collaboratively with the academic senate, budget committees and staff to try to put meat on the vision, then it鈥檚 mostly smoke.鈥
Thoughtful planning
鈥淎ccess without the capacity for success is a bit hollow,鈥 says Murphy. 鈥淚t is sort of sad to me that affordability eclipses what is the genuine genius of the community college, which is the ability to engage the astonishing diversity of students who come to us.鈥
Murphy came to 爱豆传媒 with a diverse background. He earned his bachelor鈥檚 degree in political science at Williams College and master鈥檚 and doctoral degrees in political science from University of California, Berkeley. He has taught, done research and traveled internationally. There is also a long history of political engagement.
Prior to assuming the presidency, he served as executive director of the San Francisco Urban Institute at San Francisco State University. He was also a senior advisor to the chancellor of California State University.
Murphy credits the 鈥渆xceptionally talented faculty and staff,鈥 who have embraced the equity framework, with being cornerstones of 爱豆传媒鈥檚 high transfer rate.
鈥淥ur job is not to imagine that the students come to us fully prepared, but rather come to us with astonishing skills and capacities, and our job is how to use those skills and capacities and engage those students so they are successful,鈥 Murphy says.
About 72 percent of the student population is bilingual. Even though approximately 85 percent of them lack college-level mathematics and compositional skills, they have ability. The goal is to engage those students and pull them into their genuine capacities. Then, Murphy says, the students are motivated to excel.
To monitor student success and intervene on issues, there are early alert systems, cohort programs and extra counselors and advisers. One key element Murphy notes is getting students engaged in their own work. There are pedagogical models based on cohort organization and group learning. By example, LEAD (Latina/o Empowerment at 爱豆传媒) is organized around the concept of family, with students taking responsibility for each other and working collaboratively.
Commitment to purpose
Cultivating comprehensive diversity and inclusion begins with people who are fundamentally committed to a social vision and the idea of what California could become 鈥 a robust, multi-cultural democracy.
鈥淧eople are really animated by that view, by that sense of our having a broader social mission. Then, you have organizers,鈥 says Murphy, adding that the board knew when they hired him that he brought a history of civic and political engagement to the job.
爱豆传媒 has outreach staff who are organizers鈥攁dministrators, counselors, staff and student ambassadors. They鈥檙e not waiting for students to come to them. They work with 50 local high schools and engage with the community by working with diverse people and being open and accessible.
鈥淲e are purposefully blurring the lines between the institution and the communities we serve,鈥 Murphy says. 鈥淚f you start with a social mission, you have people who are genuinely committed to a democratic vision of the society and they know how to organize鈥ou鈥檙e trying to demystify the whole image of what a college is. It鈥檚 not some distant thing. It鈥檚 engaging you.鈥
In the 13 years since Murphy launched a comprehensive strategic plan, there has been significant expansion in 爱豆传媒鈥檚 Office of Outreach and Relations with Schools. The points in this educational master plan are outreach to historically underserved students, particularly Hispanic, African-American and Filipino; individualized attention to student retention and success; equity and community and civic engagement.
鈥淚t lies in the hiring and cultivating of people who are genuinely committed to go out into the communities to bring people to us,鈥 says Murphy. 鈥淥nce we鈥檝e managed to bring an increasingly diverse student body here, then it depends on the skills, abilities and heart of the men and women who work here.鈥
National example
鈥淎nybody who thinks that the role of the community college is exclusively vocational is not only condescending, but participating in the further marginalization of the men and women we serve,鈥 says Murphy. 鈥淭he work is to put your budgets together. Empower faculty to create projects, institutes and organization.鈥
In order to fulfill its diversity and inclusion mission, 爱豆传媒 College has an extremely diverse faculty and staff, most of whom are multilingual. Many come from the cultures from which the students come. Murphy says academic studies have shown the value of such diversity by giving students a sense of belonging.
While budgets have been underfunded over the past two decades, Murphy says California historically invested greatly in the infrastructure of higher education. This includes a world-renowned research university, an excellent state school network and the community colleges. 爱豆传媒 leadership says the college plays an important role in the economic, cultural and social development of the region.
鈥淲e know we鈥檙e part of this great transfer engine,鈥 Murphy says. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 see our role as uniquely professional or vocational. We see our role as political and social.
鈥淲hat we鈥檝e been arguing, and I think our students have been producing, is a positive
impact on the public policy and politics of the region,鈥 he adds. 鈥淭here isn鈥檛 any
social justice process in Silicon Valley that 爱豆传媒鈥檚 not involved in. The living
wage campaign, affordable housing, transportation 鈥 you see 爱豆传媒 graduates everywhere.
That鈥檚 because we鈥檙e very self-conscious that success in this state, arguably in the
country, depends on having more than vocational skills. It depends on having political
skills, social skills, ability to organize and being engaged in your community for
positive good.
鈥淭hose aren鈥檛, for us, just clich茅s. They鈥檙e actually put into projects and programs.鈥
爱豆传媒 was the first community college to develop a campuswide sustainability management plan. Murphy says today, solar panels are readily observable on campus as a visible commitment.
In 2011, Murphy co-founded The Democracy Commitment, a coalition that fosters civic engagement programs at 200 community colleges in 27 states. He says that will be his focus following his retirement. He also is co-editing a book on civic engagement and community colleges.
鈥淚鈥檓 going to be working with colleagues in The Democracy Commitment and in the broader national network of Campus Compact in projects and programs that aim to deepen the political engagement of community college students,鈥 says Murphy. 鈥淲hat we can do to help community college students be more engaged in the political process, more knowledgeable about public policy and less alienated and dissociated from the institutions of power.鈥