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Johnnetta Cole also appears in the videos:
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Teachers can find prepared lesson plans featuring Johnnetta Cole in the Achievement Curriculum section:
Justice & Citizenship
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Johnnetta Cole
 
Johnnetta Cole
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Johnnetta Cole Profile

Past President of Spelman College

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  Johnnetta Cole

"I pose that question to myself, why, in the 107 years of the history of this historically Black college for women, there had not been an African-American woman president."

Ever since it was founded, Spelman College in Atlanta, Georgia has been the nation's foremost institution of higher education specifically intended for African-American women. Yet, for the first century of Spelman's existence, no African-American woman had ever served as President of the College. Dr. Johnnetta Betsch Cole made history in 1987, when she was inaugurated as president of the school.

Long before taking charge at Spelman, Dr. Cole had already distinguished herself as an anthropologist, author, university professor and administrator, with a special interest in Afro-American, Latin American and Caribbean Studies. Her scholarly interest in African-American culture began at an early age. Although she endured the indignities of racial segregation growing up in the South in the 1940s, her family instilled her with deep pride in her heritage. They had already had won a position of wealth and privilege in their community despite the obstacles placed in their path. As a child, she met such influential African-Americans as Mary McLeod Bethune, and she studied the history of her people in a public library named for her own great-grandfather.

Dr. Cole has served on the boards of major corporations and assisted President Clinton in the formation of his first Administration, at the same time leading Spelman College to new heights of academic excellence. After serving as President of Spelman for a decade, Dr. Cole is now Presidential Distinguished Professor of Anthropology, Women's Studies, and African-American Studies at Emory University.




This page last revised on Feb 01, 2005 13:16 PDT