Campus Reform Highlights AIM Investigation Into Ohio State DEI Practices
July 1, 2026
NYU to host ‘anti-racism social work’ workshop this fall
Brendan McDonald ’27 | New Hampshire Correspondent
July 1, 2026, 1:06 pm ET
New York University will teach students about “anti-racism social work” through a four-part workshop this fall.
”Anti-racist Supervision as a Path to Liberation: Foundations of Anti-racist Supervision,” sponsored by the Silver School of Social Work, is scheduled for Sept. 18, Sept. 25, Oct. 2, and Oct. 9. It will carry a $250 general admission price tag.
”This course offers an overview of anti-racism social work practice tenets and strategies for engaging in anti-racism supervision,” the university’s description reads.
”Through the application of practice-based strategies, participants will have the opportunity to integrate anti-racist approaches to social work in their supervisory framework,” it continues. “This will help push social work towards more race-conscious and just practice.”
The description also includes a “Note on Inclusion,” which states that the program is “open to individuals of all backgrounds and identities.”
As Campus Reform has previously reported, some social work programs continue to rely on diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) principles.
Accuracy in Media (AIM), a DEI watchdog, released an undercover video featuring the Assistant Dean of Academic Affairs at Ohio State University’s College of Social Work asserting that DEI remains a fixture in the school’s curriculum.
AIM President Adam Guillette argued the NYU workshop demonstrates a similar commitment to ideology.
”It’s abundantly clear that NYU is more focused on ideology than education,” Guillette argued. “The radicals who run these universities have hijacked a noble profession and are using it to promote activism. Our investigators consistently see this behavior in red states so I’m not surprised at all to find it in deep blue New York.”
”Colleges of social work, education, and criminology across America have been captured by far-left radicals,” he continued. “When people wonder why social workers and educators sound like members of the Democratic Socialists of America, higher education is exclusively to blame.”