In just one generation, Ira K. Blake grew from being the daughter of sharecroppers to becoming the fifth president of
University of Houston-Clear Lake, the first woman and the first African American to
serve in the role. For Blake, education was the key to transforming her life, and
is a crucial part of her story.
“I tell my story often as a way of encouraging students and staff to tell their own
stories,” she said. “It’s important, because people sometimes hold negative stereotypes
of underrepresented minorities, the working-class and women in certain roles. Who
thinks a sharecropper’s daughter is going to become the president of a university?”
She added that by telling our personal stories, we remind each other that the expression
of humanity comes in many different faces, languages, belief systems, preferred dispositions
and cultural practices. “Doing so helps us to see others as individuals who also have
the potential to contribute positively,” she said.
Challenges, not discouragements
Blake, who is one of nine children, grew up in a segregated community in Southern
California. She said her parents only had elementary-level schooling, but they always
stressed the importance of hard work and respect for others. “I was always a very
curious person, so my challenge was trying to understand the benefit of learning certain
concepts without knowing their value for my life,” she said. “This may be a problem
for other first-generation students like me, who haven’t had supported access to definable
opportunities. Doing homework for homework’s sake wasn’t always that interesting.
You look at an assignment sometimes and ask yourself how much effort should you invest
if you don’t see the value of work.”
She remembered one instance in a high school history class when, having completed
her preparation for her assignment, asked her teacher why, if there had been a long
war fought about slavery, there was only a single paragraph addressing it in their
textbook.
“The teacher didn’t have an answer, but he gave me a copy of ‘The Sound of Music,’
which to this day I have not read,” she said. “It wasn’t what I was curious about.
I wanted to know why if a whole group of people, of which I was one, had been treated
like property and there was a war to end slavery, there was not more about the issues
surrounding that war. To me, that was a challenge.”
Others she knew growing up, she said, had likely faced more difficulty due to racial
discrimination than she had. “I was curious about living things in the world so learning
was important to understanding it all. My schoolwork had value in seeking answers
as I moved through life,” she said. “Not always getting a meaningful answer to my
questions was a frustration at times, but not a discouragement from continuing to
move forward.”
Making your door
Having grown up in the 1960s during the Civil Rights movement, Blake said she was
raised to know she would have to work harder. “My parents expected me to apply my
full effort to everything I did,” she said. “I was told to be persistent and endure,
but not forget where I came from. Higher education is the gateway to opportunity,
even if there are many obstacles along the way. This is why it’s so important to tell
your personal story.”
Blake said she experienced some frustrations throughout her own education, but never
got to the point when she considered giving up. “I remember when I was working on
my doctoral dissertation, which was about the language development of African American
toddlers,” she said. “I videotaped the talk and play behavior of toddlers and their
mothers., with each hour of video tape requiring 30 hours of transcription to accurately
account for interactions. One day, my video tape machine wasn’t functioning properly,
and I had a firm schedule to have a certain amount of work done by a certain day.”
As her frustration mounted, she received an unexpected call from her father. “I told
him about the problems I was having,” she said. “He told me that I could either throw
the towel in and toss the completed transcripts off the balcony or I could figure
out what was wrong. Either way, he told me to call him back when I had made up my
mind. Of course, I figured it out.”
From that experience, she learned that there was more than one solution to a problem.
“You go around, you go under, or you go through,” she said. “If I couldn’t get through,
I learned to seek assistance. If someone says no, it’s OK. Go to the next person.
I’ve always tried, and what I’d like our students to do, is not to throw in the towel.
If one door closes, are there other ways in? Maybe you wait for someone to go in with
you.”
Sharing your story
As Black History Month begins, Blake said it serves a reminder of our collective
past, and celebrating it draws people of all ethnicities into the complex, diverse
story of America. “We should celebrate the heritage of every group of people so we
recognize each group’s contributions to humanity,” she said. “African Americans have
contributed enormously to this country.”
Blake said that in telling your personal story, make sure that you select your words
with meaning and intention. “Words can help or hurt. They can encourage and support,
and I want us all to be mindful of the words we use and the consequences they can
have,” she said. “As you tell your story, speak up for fairness, justice and opportunity.
There’s nothing extraordinary about me; it’s always been about my relationships with
other people. The overridingly important act is to care about others, develop healthy
relationships, and help the world be inclusive of others. Find your words and tell
your story.”
Her story, she said, continues to be defined by her inventive, curious nature. “Everyone
said I would be in school for the rest of my life,” she said. “And here I am, still
in school.”
President Blake shares more about her life story in a video interview online.
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