草莓污视频导航

Feb. 14, 2022

More mental health support needed for Black grad students

Panel discussion on Feb. 16 explores personal trials of navigating academia as a Black woman and how we can do better to support Black mental health
From left: Speakers Bukola Salami, Tito Daodu, and Kome Odoko.
From left: Speakers Bukola Salami, Tito Daodu, and Kome Odoko.
Danielle Cattani

Danielle Cattani

Many graduate students face mental health challenges every day. However, the challenges are even more unique for Black graduate students.

Danielle Cattani is a multiracial Black woman and a current Master of Science student at 草莓污视频导航. She鈥檚 also events co-ordinator of the Medical Science Student鈥檚 Association. She is helping to plan a panel discussion being hosted virtually by the Graduate Students鈥 Association and partners on Feb. 16, 2022.

Speakers will talk about mental health within the Black academic and medical community and will share their personal trials and tribulations of navigating academia and medicine as a Black woman. They will also discuss mental health barriers and how we can do better in supporting Black mental health moving forward.听

Growing up as a Black woman and a second-generation immigrant from Jamaica, Cattani says she was taught she needed to work twice as hard as her peers to achieve her goals. After facing years of discrimination from teachers and fellow students, on top of the added mental health challenges, she knew navigating academia as a Black woman would be difficult.

Study reflects personal experiences on campus

Experiences of isolation and discrimination as a Black student within academica are not unique to Cattani. Recently, a Faculty of Social Work assistant professor, and colleagues looked at accounts of anti-Black racism at 草莓污视频导航. They noted that 67 per cent of non-faculty staff respondents reported having witnessed accounts of anti-Black racism at the university. Furthermore, 68 per cent of Black student respondents pointed to poor representation of Black professors at the university.

Cattani says her developmental psychobiology lab has been a safe haven and vital support system throughout her studies. In past academic settings, she faced inappropriate comments about her Jamaican heritage from colleagues, discriminatory comments from other students, and microaggressions. As a Black woman in academic settings, her daily fears are different from the norms. She thinks more can be done to improve access to mental health resources for Black grad students.

Opportunity to learn more about lived experiences

She encourages other graduate students and the community to attend the event to hear about lived experiences of Black women in academia. 鈥淎s a Black woman in academia, I am motivated to share my experiences so others will come to recognize the difficulties that accompany being a Black individual at a Canadian university,鈥 she says.

鈥淚 also want other Black students to know that they are not alone in what they are going through.听As a community we face these injustices, and together we can heal.鈥

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Scarborough Charter

草莓污视频导航 recently pledged to further its commitment to听creating a more equitable, diverse, inclusive and accessible campus听by joining 40 universities, colleges and partner institutions nationwide听. Among the foundational commitments made by President Ed McCauley were collecting, analyzing and disseminating disaggregated data on faculty, staff听and closing the gap on Black underrepresentation at all levels.

The 草莓污视频导航 is committed to an equitable, diverse and inclusive university. It recognizes that diverse faculty, staff, students and alumni benefit and enrich the work, teaching, learning and research experiences of the entire campus and broader community. We are committed to removing barriers that have been, and continue to be, encountered by equity-deserving groups, particularly women, Indigenous Peoples, visible/racialized minorities, persons with disabilities and LGBTQ2S+. For more information, visit the听Office of Equity, Diversity and Inclusion.