Events

Dean's Diversity Lecture Featuring Dr. Heather Shotton

Event Type: Lecture

Dr. Heather Shotton will discuss at this lecture the multiple and nuanced ways that universities perpetuate settler colonial aims of erasure for indigenous students. She will invite participants to unsettle their institutions and reimagine higher education as a place of love and resistance through scholarship, learning, and practice.

 

Heather Shotton, Ph.D., is a citizen of the Wichita & Affiliated Tribes and is also of Kiowa and Cheyenne descent. She is an associate professor in Educational Leadership & Policy Studies and Director of Indigenous Education Initiatives in the Jeannine Rainbolt College of Education at the University of Oklahoma.

 

She also serves as affiliate faculty in Women’s and Gender Studies and Native American Studies. Dr. Shotton’s research focuses on indigenous students and indigenous women in higher education. She served as a co-editor for three books that address Indigenous Higher Education; Beyond the Asterisk: Understanding Native Students in Higher Education (Stylus), Reclaiming Indigenous Research in Higher Education (Rutgers University Press), and Beyond Access: Indigenizing Programs for Native American Student Success (Stylus). 

 

Dr. Shotton has spent her career advocating for indigenous students and communities in educational systems. Dr. Shotton is a past president for the National Indian Education Association (NIEA), a former NIEA Educator of the Year, and a strong advocate for indigenous education.

Cost: Free

Contact: Amy Summers217-333-0960
arsummer@illinois.edu