Special Thanks to

PROFESSOR JOHN H. BRACEY, JR.

ASALH  & ABWH


CONTACT
TEACHING SERVICE VITA
RESEARCH
SPOTLIGHT
RESOURCES BIOGRAPHY DIVERSITY

Professor Bracey's professional mentoring has made a significant impact on me. Aside from chairing my dissertation committee, in 2000, he took me and other graduate students from UMass, Amherst to the Association for the Study of African American Life and History (ASALH) conference. ASALH was founded in 1915 by Carter G. Woodson, who also began what is now Black History Month. Since my first ASALH conference, members of that organization have also been extraordinary mentors. Additionally, I joined the Association of Black Women Historians (ABWH) (founded in 1979) and have been fortunate to meet with leading scholars in my area. Through these organizations, I have learned much from senior scholars. In turn, I have taken some students from Brown and UF to ASALH.

Professional development, particularly in African American Studies, is imperative if the field is to grow. Connections with ASALH, ABWH, National Council for Black Studies (NCBS), and the Southern Conference of African American Studies, Incorporated are essential for the next generation of scholars in the field of Black Studies.


DR. EVANS * MAIN PAGE
http://plaza.ufl.edu/drevans


John H Bracey Jr.
John H. Bracey  Jr.
Mentor and Dissertation Chair

PROFESSOR BRACEY'S
BIO & PUBLICATIONS



Hine and Bracey 
Professor Bracey and the distinguished Dr. Darlene Clark-Hine at their annual mentoring session for junior scholars. ASALH 2005 Buffalo, New York

with vanessa

With Vanessa Fabien,
African American Studies student, UF Univeristy Scholar, and Ronald E. McNair Scholar,

ASALH 2005 Buffalo, New York


Vanessa entered the doctoral program in Afro-American Studies at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst in Fall 2006
HIne and Berry
Dr. Hine with historian and history maker, Dr. Mary Frances Berry. ASALH 2005 Buffalo, New York