In the Media
IWF in the News: Bill Cosby Leads Forum at Howard
A line of people waited outside of the Howard University Aldridge Theatre on Sept. 20 to attend the "About Our Children" forum featuring longtime entertainer and activist Bill Cosby.
The
forum, hosted and televised by MSNBC, was moderated by Independent
Women's Forum CEO Michelle D. Bernard and included panelists who
touched on topics ranging from education to poverty.
"I want
people to think back on history and realize that there is truly nothing
that we can't do," Bernard said. "Today is just the first day of what
will be a national grassroots mobilization effort where we will gather
parents and children to really take the bull by the horns to do
everything that we can to ensure that every child has a shot at the
American dream."
The
panel included Dr. Alvin Poussaint, psychiatry professor at Harvard
University, NAACP President Ben Jealous, author and publicist Terrie
Williams, and Michelle Rhee, chancellor of the D.C. public school
system. The panel began with a discussion of parenting and education."Outside
of your house, and even in the TV sets, we can't trust those people to
tell our children correct things or to give them love," Cosby said.
"You've got to go visit the schoolteacher. Someone is spending six to
seven hours with your child, and you don't want to know who it is?"
Fifty
years have gone by since Brown v. Board of Education, and America is
still having a dialogue about equal education among all students.
Chancellor
Rhee has been in the public education field for 17 years and believes
there is a preconceived notion that parents don't care.
"What I
have found in my career in education is that I have never met a mother
anywhere who didn't want the same thing for her children that I want
for my children," Rhee said.
Civil rights activist Dorothy
Height, an audience member, also expressed her thoughts on single
parenting and ways in which the Howard University can help in educating
students who have lost hope.
"One of the things that we have to
do is try to find the time to teach the students how to learn certain
skills," Height said. "There are many organizations in the community
who have programs that are helpful. I think we have to just say to the
children that they have to have hope there will be a future. I know
it's hard to do, but they have to look at and see."
As Height
spoke about restoring hope within the children, the panel also spoke
about the emotional health that the children face. "The most important
thing that a parent should remember is the harder the kids push back,
the closer we have to come to them," Rhee said.
"You value yourself, you value your life, and you will value your child," Cosby said.






1 Comment
harriette bannister | September 28, 2009, 7:04pm | #
I missed you program 9/22. I hope it will air again? when?