
The Tilford Group is a research and development group consisting of inter- disciplinary faculty, administrators, and students who are developing a multicultural curriculum model to facilitate the total student experience.
The Kansas Regents Conference on Diversity and Multiculturalism, held annually since 1994, provides an opportunity for faculty, administrators and staff at the Kansas Regents institutions to expand their expertise in the academic areas of diversity and multiculturalism. Participants have the opportunity to explore strategies, exchange ideas about practical applications of diversity education, and establish collaborative efforts. Keynote presentations and Action Session workshops at this conference focus on building partnerships both inside and outside academia.
The conference was renamed the Michael Tilford Conference on Diversity and Multiculturalism to recognize the work of the late Dr. Michael P. Tilford from Wichita State University, who passed away on November 6, 1996. Dr. Tilford was one of the WSU representatives on the Regents Conference Planning Committee since its inception in 1994, and at the time of his death he was chairing the committee in preparation for the 1997 conference at WSU.
In 1969 Dr. Tilford was one of 100 African-American educators from across the country who received Ford Foundation Grants for advanced graduate study, and received his doctorate from Oklahoma State University. Dr. Tilford also had earned the bachelor's degree from Langston University in mathematics and chemistry and the master's degree from Johns Hopkins University in science education. He was appointed dean of the Graduate School in 1988 and associate vice president for Academic Affairs in 1994.
Dr. Tilford was co-chair of the North Central Association accreditation team at WSU, chair of the Kansas Graduate Deans, a member of the national organization Council of Graduate Schools, and past chair of the Midwestern Association for Graduate Schools. In the 1970s he served in a committee that developed a successful proposal for the minority studies program. In addition, he helped to conduct a study of the institutional commitment to "minorities" at WSU. Dr. Michael P. Tilford was a beloved colleague and friend to all who knew him, at WSU and around the state, region and nation, as well as on the Tilford Conference planning committee.
The Kansas State University Tilford Group is an outgrowth of the statewide Michael Tilford Conference on Diversity and Multiculturalism. Since 1997, the KSU Tilford Group has been developing a multidimensional initiative, identifying multicultural competencies needed by KSU graduates.