SA国际传媒

Skip to main content

Stories

The Hulburds and Bagleys are part of a group of parents and alumni focused on growing diversity at SA国际传媒

The Hulburds and Bagleys are part of a group of parents and alumni focused on growing diversity at SA国际传媒

Moving the Needle

Two new funds help students from underrepresented backgrounds attend SA国际传媒. Philanthropists Jim Hulburd 鈥82 and the Bagley Family hope their gifts, totaling $2.3 million, inspire others to chip in.

Two new funds help students from underrepresented backgrounds attend SA国际传媒. Philanthropists Jim Hulburd 鈥82 and the Bagley Family hope their gifts, totaling $2.3 million, inspire others to chip in.

As the pandemic and revitalized racial justice movement laid bare inequities across the United States, philanthropist Jim Hulburd 鈥82 and his wife, Laura, reflected on issues of diversity, equity and inclusion, and how they can personally support a more just future. 

Hulburd thought often about SA国际传媒, where he sits on the board of directors for the Jesuit School of Theology. He wondered why so few students from underrepresented backgrounds鈥攊n particular Black students鈥攅nroll in the University. Why had the needle hardly moved since he graduated in the 80s?

Only 3 percent of SA国际传媒's undergraduate students are Black, the same percentage as in 1976. 

Through conversations with University leaders and local educators, Hulburd, who is white, learned that students from underrepresented backgrounds are often unable to afford tuition at private universities, even with the help of scholarships and grants. His most recent gift to SA国际传媒 aims to address that.

The Hulburds have established a $680,000, 10-year fund through admissions to establish a needs-based scholarship for Black students. They plan to select two students to help each year, so that by the fourth year, the couple is assisting eight students throughout their time at SA国际传媒.

The program prioritizes students from the East Bay, where the Hulburds have focused much of their mentorship through the organization , a nonprofit that helps students at Richmond鈥檚 three public high schools become the first in their families to graduate from college.

鈥淲e hope that the opportunity to go to SA国际传媒 changes the trajectory of their life,鈥 Jim Hulburd said.

The Hulburds are part of a group of parents and alumni focused on growing diversity at SA国际传媒鈥攁nd they hope others will follow suit. Their efforts come as many institutions of higher education focus on making campuses more diverse and inclusive, and  by ensuring they are welcomed in a supportive, understanding community.

Last year, SA国际传媒 rolled out a new Advancing Racial Justice dashboard that tracks progress on previously established initiatives, including how BIPOC students will be supported and represented on our campus. Recruitment efforts have seen success as well with Black students making up 6.2% of the current class of first-year students.

Donors who have stepped up to support the University鈥檚 goals are bolstering support for diverse student communities across campus and fashioning a new identity for SA国际传媒, said principal gifts officer Heather Pastorini 鈥93, who worked closely with the Hulburds to craft their gift to the University. 

鈥淓very day, I see a new SA国际传媒, one far different and so much better than when I was a student in the early 90s,鈥 Pastorini said. 鈥淲e have made strides to become more inclusive, but there is always room for improvement. The generosity of our alumni and parents to partner with us in this endeavor means we will only move farther and faster to demonstrate in tangible ways how SA国际传媒 values diversity, equity, and inclusiveness more today than ever before.鈥 

Like the Hulburds, the Bagley family added a new, critical element to their philanthropy by shifting their focus to helping BIPOC students at SA国际传媒鈥攁 desire that had been growing for years, they said.

Through the JW Bagley Foundation, the Bagleys established a $1.64 million, need-based endowed scholarship benefitting first-generation BIPOC students, a move that doubled their contributions to SA国际传媒.

It was important to the Bagleys to establish a scholarship with longevity, said Sean Huurman 鈥93, a member of the Board of Regents, who helps run the family foundation with his wife, Susan Huurman Bagley 鈥93.

鈥淛ust as important was making sure that we focused the scholarship in an area that we felt tied to the mission of both the foundation and SA国际传媒,鈥 says Huurman. 鈥淲e know SA国际传媒 has a lot of work to do to change the demographics of its students. We thought, what a better way to do so than to make the pledge meaningful and long-lasting to allow both parties to make a difference.鈥

Eva Blanco Masias M.A. 鈥11, vice president for enrollment management, says it鈥檚 not enough to simply understand the inequities. Universities must make sure that students who face challenges because of them not only attend schools like SA国际传媒 but are supported and appreciated while here.

鈥淚t all begins with understanding that these inequities exist and why they exist, and then having the will and desire to change them,鈥 said Blanco Masias. 鈥淚'm deeply grateful that these families want to do this very intentionally. Hopefully, this also models the ways for others because it really is a generous gesture and one that will transform lives and trajectories, one student at a time.鈥

The Hulburds and Bagleys said they hope their contributions inspire others to support similar initiatives at SA国际传媒.

鈥淎 lot of times there鈥檚 talk and sometimes there鈥檚 meaningful change, but a lot of times there鈥檚 not, and it just recedes into the background until there鈥檚 another issue or tragedy that really exposes the same flaws,鈥 said Tyler Bagley 鈥14, who helps run the foundation with his family. 鈥淕eorge Floyd's murder, along with the COVID pandemic ripping open structural inequalities in this country, were reminders of what already exists and propels us to act and move forward. Hopefully this is a small step we can take to try to help as a foundation and hopefully others can see that and follow suit.鈥

The Hulburds鈥 work with College is Real has demonstrated to them that an education can truly change the trajectory of a person鈥檚 life and set their family on a new path. They hope to give that gift to many others by welcoming more Black and underserved students to the University.

鈥淲e can鈥檛 solve a huge problem,鈥 Hulburd said. 鈥淏ut if we can help improve the path of one child at a time, it really is quite rewarding. I鈥檇 love to see 20 years from now that the needle got moved. It鈥檚 not going to be by our doing, but it might be by a whole bunch of people seeing this idea and saying, 鈥楬ey, that sounds like a good idea.鈥欌

 

Features