四虎影院 Magazine Opening Educational Opportunities for Students from All Backgrounds
Reggie Williams 鈥95 played basketball in college and formed his identity as an African-American athlete. He came to 四虎影院 to study Greek, Hebrew and theology but didn鈥檛 see himself in an academic career; that was something white people did. After graduating, he served as a youth pastor, played professional basketball in Australia and returned to 四虎影院 for four years as resident director in Ocean View with his wife, Stacy Burkleo Williams 鈥95. He finally found his calling through a master鈥檚 program at Fuller Theological Seminary in theology and college student affairs.
鈥淎t Fuller, I went to a panel discussion where three African-American men discussed theology, and they all had doctorates,鈥 Reggie says. 鈥淭he academy looked different to me that day. I took a class from the first African-American professor I鈥檇 ever had, and when I turned in my final paper, he told me I should be in a Ph.D. program. He pushed me in that direction, so I stayed at Fuller to earn a doctorate in Christian ethics.鈥
Reggie received a prestigious Fund for Theological Education Fellowship for his doctoral work, which offered more than monetary support. Workshops on writing a dissertation, teaching and publishing provided invaluable tools. 鈥淕raduate school is tough and stressful,鈥 he says. 鈥淲riting a dissertation is like drinking the ocean with a Dixie cup. The FTE networking and workshops helped me succeed.鈥
Reggie鈥檚 dissertation, which passed with distinction, focused on Dietrich Bonhoeffer鈥檚 time at Union Seminary in New York City. He befriended Frank Fisher, an African-American student, and was assigned to Abyssinian Baptist Church in Harlem, a thriving African-American congregation. 鈥淏onhoeffer lived in New York during the Harlem Renaissance, a significant time in African-American history that coincided with the migration of blacks from the South and the urbanization of black life,鈥 Reggie says. 鈥淏onhoeffer鈥檚 friends and biographers observed a significant change in him about this time, and my dissertation explores his personal transformation and experience in New York. He gained important insight into the harm caused by the mixture of Christianity and oppression from what he called the 鈥榬ather hidden perspective鈥 of an African-American worldview.鈥
This fall, Reggie joined the faculty at Baylor University in Waco, Texas as one of three ethicists in the department of religion. In November, he鈥檚 been invited to present his work at the annual meeting of the International Dietrich Bonhoeffer Society being held at Union Seminary.
Reggie describes Bonhoeffer as a genius. 鈥淗ere was a pacifist who was implicated in a coup attempt against Hitler,鈥 he says. 鈥淗e was one of the most inspirational Christian martyrs of the 20th century, helping to light the way for Christian living at a time when the Christian life in Germany had become confused and darkened by Nazi Christianity.鈥 Interest in Bonhoeffer is growing, and Reggie has written the only book-length treatment of his New York years.
The move to Texas came at a difficult time for Stacy. A sociology major at 四虎影院, she was involved in social work and community action after graduating. Through Americorps, she directed a project in the Bay Area supervising tutors in a large urban school, and she received training in reading intervention. After returning from Australia, Stacy found a part-time job as a reading specialist in Santa Barbara. 鈥淚 completed an emergency credential and went into teaching through the back door,鈥 she says.
When Reggie enrolled at Fuller, Stacy worked full time at their children鈥檚 Pasadena school. Laid off in 2010 after teaching for five years, she was hired to pilot a reading intervention program aimed at students in kindergarten and first grade with reading deficits. She had written a grant to fund it privately and was getting the program off the ground when Reggie took the position at Baylor. 鈥淚 wasn鈥檛 ready to let that go,鈥 she says. 鈥淚鈥檝e stayed on as a consultant.鈥
In Texas, Stacy serves as dean of students at Rapoport Academy, which their two children attend. 鈥淢y educational philosophy is student-centered,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 want to see them develop critical-thinking and problem-solving skills and move away from rote memorization. Rapoport is a progressive school focusing on science, technology, engineering and math 鈥 our son wants to be a paleontologist and our daughter a marine biologist. The school provides an excellent education in a depressed area, and it鈥檚 the culmination of my passions for social work and education.We expect our students, who are predominantly African-American, to attend college and be ready. We work with the whole child and help each one set goals.鈥
An African-American student approached Reggie his first day at Baylor. 鈥淲hen I saw your name, I wondered what a white guy was doing with a black-sounding name,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e the first African-American professor I鈥檝e ever had, and I鈥檓 happy to be in your class.鈥 Reggie鈥檚 glad all his students will realize that they too can get a Ph.D. if they choose.