The University of Oklahoma College of Architecture is proud to announce that Model Schools in the Model City, authored by Director of the Institute for Quality Communities, Amber N. Wiley, Ph.D., has been named one of ten finalists for the 2026 ASALH Book Prize for Best New Book in African American History and Culture.
Published by the University of Pittsburgh Press, Wiley's book has been recognized by the Association for the Study of African American Life and History (ASALH) for its outstanding contribution to the field. The prize, established in 2021, is an annual prize to recognize an outstanding book in the field of African American history and culture.
“This acknowledgment is particularly significant, coming from the organization that Carter G. Woodson co-founded for the proliferation of research on Black history,” said Wiley. “The nomination is a testament to the important role that the history of Black Americans can play in telling complex stories about the built environment.”
Model Schools in the Model City
Model Schools in the Model City chronicles how Black Washingtonians used public education as a means of racial uplift in the face of entrenched white resistance. The book examines how school buildings themselves became physical realizations of Black liberation, agency, and citizenship. Wiley recounts the story of Black Washingtonians' educational ambitions and their fight to maintain access to quality education in the nation's capital, revealing how these buildings stood as tests of whether their citizenship would be perpetually guaranteed.
The ASALH Book Prize committee evaluates submissions across disciplinary and interdisciplinary boundaries, selecting projects that are beautifully written, engage with new or underutilized archives, and use particular historical experiences to illuminate universal aspects of the human experience.
The winner of the 2026 ASALH Book Prize will be announced on February 17, 2026, during the ASALH Black History Month Festival.
Christopher C. Gibbs College of Architecture congratulates Thinh "Henry" Duong, a master's student in the Division of Interior Design, for earning first place in the 2026 Robert Bruce Thompson Annual Student Light Fixture Design Competition.
Gibbs College of Architecture Institute for Quality Communities (IQC) Director and Division of Planning, Landscape Architecture, and Design (PLAD) faculty member Amber N. Wiley, Ph.D., recently published a new book, Collective Yearning: Black Women Artists from the Zimmerli Art Museum.
In May, students from the Christopher C. Gibbs College of Architecture's Architecture, Environmental Design, and Interior Design programs participated in an intensive five-day Studio in Residence at Taliesin West, the iconic winter home and desert laboratory of Frank Lloyd Wright.