In his new role, Jackson is responsible for providing
leadership and coordinating programs and services to promote the academic
success for all graduate students.
Jackson received his bachelor of science in history and
master’s degree in public administration from FAMU. He went on to obtain his
doctoral degree from the University of Memphis.
He joined the FAMU faculty in the fall of 1997. He was
promoted to the rank of associate professor in three years and full professor
of history in the College of Social Sciences, Arts, and Humanities in only
seven years.
Jackson has taught both undergraduate and graduate courses, and provided leadership as department chair of the Department of History, Political Science, Public Administration, Geography, and African-American Studies for the last 10 years. He has served on and chaired a host of University, college, and departmental committees, including the University’s annual Black History Convocation.
Jackson has taught both undergraduate and graduate courses, and provided leadership as department chair of the Department of History, Political Science, Public Administration, Geography, and African-American Studies for the last 10 years. He has served on and chaired a host of University, college, and departmental committees, including the University’s annual Black History Convocation.
Shortly after he began working at FAMU, Jackson won the
Rattler Pride Award for Community Leadership in 2000. He was also the recipient
of the FAMU Teacher of the Year Award for 2000 and 2010, and the Advanced
Teacher of the Year Award in 2006. He is
the 2010 recipient of the FAMU Research Excellence Award, and in April 2011 he
was enshrined into the Gallery of Distinction for the former FAMU College of
Arts and Sciences (renamed the College of Social Sciences, Arts, and
Humanities). He was named as one of FAMU’s “Outstanding Alumni of the
Quasiquicentennial” in 2012.
Recognized as one of FAMU’s most published professors,
Jackson has published more than four dozen scholarly articles, short essays,
and book reviews, and has presented more than 100 scholarly papers and riveting
speeches at professional conferences, universities, public schools, prisons, courts,
churches, the Florida Legislature, and other venues throughout the United
States.
He is author or editor of five scholarly books including “A
Chief Lieutenant of the Tuskegee Machine: Charles Banks of Mississippi,”
published in 2002; “Retrieving the American Past,” published in 2003; and “Go
Sound the Trumpet: Selections in Florida’s African-American History,” published
in 2005. His latest book titled, “Booker
T. Washington and the Struggle Against White Supremacy: The Southern
Educational Tours, 1908-1912” was published in 2008. He was featured on C-SPAN
in 2014 to discuss his book and intimate knowledge of the life of Washington.
Since becoming a professor at FAMU, Jackson has personally
mentored and sent more than 30 students off to doctoral programs throughout the
country where they have earned doctoral degrees, mainly in history, and are now
working as college and university professors.
He received the Equity Award from the American Historical Association,
the largest historical association in the country, for this accomplishment in
2014.
Jackson said he wants his progression from a hopeful FAMU
student to an associate provost and dean to serve as an inspiration to all
Rattlers who are striving to achieve greater success within their careers.
“As a graduate student at FAMU in the Master of Applied
Social Science Program, I had my first job at the University as a graduate
assistant in the School of Graduate Studies and Research under the tutelage of
legendary dean, Dr. Charles U. Smith,” Jackson said. “Now, I am elated to have
come full circle and to be back as associate provost and dean leading that
office. My story should resonate with and demonstrate to all Rattlers that hard
work really does pay off, and patience is a virtue.”