BCC Honors Black History Month

Print Story | Email Story
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — In honor of Black History Month, the Jonathan Edwards Library at Berkshire Community College (BCC) has selected 70 print books from its collection and put them on display through February.
 
The books, which include historical works, essays, poems and memoirs penned by Black authors, are located on the first floor of the library and are available for checkout. 
 
"The books chosen for display this year embody the theme of 'Black Resistance,' chosen by the Association for the Study of African American Life and History (ASALH), via powerful stories and truths that educate us about what it's like to be Black in our society," said Reference Librarian Andrea Robare. "Authors like Michael Eric Dyson, Ta-nehisi Coates, James Baldwin and Jesmyn Ward, to name a few, share their stories and expertise." 
 
Elsewhere on campus, Professor of Sociology Stacy Evans is integrating "Pittsfield Westside Neighborhood, A Case Study: Redlining in the Mill Towns of New England" into the classroom to add more local context to her Race and Ethnicity course. 
 
Redlining, according to Habitat for Humanity, is "the practice of arbitrarily denying or limiting financial services to specific neighborhoods, generally because its residents are people of color or are poor." 
 
The case study was commissioned by Greylock Federal Credit Union with the support of Berkshire Bank, the Berkshire Branch of the NAACP and the MCLA Foundation.   
 
"This study helps students connect the larger social patterns to the place where they live and makes what can seem distant real," Evans said. "They are reading not just about other places and other people, but about things that really happen in places they know." 
 
Finally, on Feb. 2, BCC's Student Engagement department presented "The Black-Jew Dialogues," a social justice comedy show that examined the relationship between African Americans and Jews through American history through sketches and interactive video. The show modeled what an honest, necessary and sometimes difficult cross-cultural conversation can look like, with dialogue stressing unity and advocacy across marginalized cultures. 

Tags: BCC,   

If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.

Worldwide PowerSchool Breach Reaches Pittsfield Schools

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — District students and teachers had their personal information accessed as part of a worldwide PowerSchool breach.

"This is not unique to the City of Pittsfield," Superintendent Joseph Curtis told the School Committee on Wednesday.

"Every one of the 18,000 PowerSchool customers has experienced a data breach. We were informed yesterday with a very brief notice from PowerSchool and our technology department began to dig into the impact near immediately."

The breach reportedly took place between Dec. 19 and 28, when it was detected by PowerSchool and all accounts were locked down. It is being investigated by the FBI and a third-party cybersecurity firm.

On Jan. 8, PowerSchool hosted a webinar with the investigative team to provide school districts with further details about the situation.

The Pittsfield Public School's technology department investigation found that personal information from the fields "Student" and "Teacher" were accessed. This includes home addresses, phone numbers, and email addresses.

Other school districts have reported access to student grades, health information and Social Security numbers. 

As a cybersecurity computer science student, School Committee member William Garrity found the breach "deeply concerning."

"I am concerned by the security practice PowerSchool had implemented before this," he said.

"I think there was a lot of this oversight, I'm not going to get into it in this meeting. Hopefully not just us but other districts around Massachusetts, the county, and the world hold PowerSchool accountable for their security practices."

View Full Story

More Pittsfield Stories