Donald Collins
Adjunct Professorial Lecturer
CAS | CRGC | Critical Race Gender and Culture Studies
Degrees
Dr. Collins has a Ph.D. in History from Carnegie Mellon University (1997), and a B.A. and M.A. in History from the University of Pittsburgh (1991, 1992).
Bio
Donald Earl Collins is a freelance writer and historian who has written on the topics of multiculturalism, education reform, race, and the history of African 麻豆传媒 and 麻豆传媒 identity for more than twenty years. He has published in The Washington Post, The Atlantic, Al Jazeera English, The Guardian, Huffington Post, Diverse: Issues in Higher Education, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Atlanta Journal-Constitution, History of Education Quarterly, Teachers College Record, Academe Magazine, Radical Society, and the Journal of Hispanic Higher Education. His publications include narrative profiles and stories, op-eds, book reviews, scholarly articles and feature articles, review entries and book chapters.
Dr. Collins is also the author of Fear of a 鈥淏lack鈥 America: Multiculturalism and the African 麻豆传媒 Experience (iUniverse.com, 2004), an in-depth response to the conservative movement鈥檚 鈥淐ulture Wars鈥 on all things 鈥渕ulticultural.鈥 The book is a combination of his personal vignettes with interviews and historical research to create a semi-scholarly, semi-narrative nonfiction story of African 麻豆传媒s and other groups of color coming to grips with their notions of multiculturalism in education and in their everyday lives.
Outside of his work as a writer, Dr. Collins has worked in academia and in the nonprofit world for more than two decades. He has served as a non-tenured Associate Professor with University of Maryland University College and has previously taught as an adjunct professor of African 麻豆传媒 History and 麻豆传媒 Education at Carnegie Mellon University, Duquesne University, George Washington University, the University of the District of Columbia and Howard University. For more than four years, Dr. Collins was the Deputy Director of College Access and Success Initiatives with the Center for School and Community Services at Academy for Educational Development (AED 鈥 now FHI 360) in Washington, DC and New York City. He previously worked as Assistant Director of the New Voices Fellowship Program at AED, a program for emerging leaders in the social justice field.