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Moving from the Margins to the Center: How to Develop a Comprehensive Diversity Strategy from the Ground Up. NCORE 2009 May 30, 2009. Time Line. 1992 President Lee Berk establishes college Diversity Committee, a group of volunteer staff and faculty interested in addressing these issues.
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Moving from the Margins to the Center: How to Develop a Comprehensive Diversity Strategy from the Ground Up NCORE 2009 May 30, 2009
Time Line • 1992 President Lee Berk establishes college Diversity Committee, a group of volunteer staff and faculty interested in addressing these issues. • 2002 Diversity Committee disbands after 10 years. • 2004 Gender Equity Task Force release report recommending creation of a new position of Vice President for Cultural Diversity. • 2004 Board of Trustees establishes a Diversity Initiative of 1 million dollars a year and a Presidential Scholarship Awards program towards these efforts as new President Roger Brown is inaugurated
Time Line continued… • 2006 (April) First Vice President for Cultural Diversity is hired. Her staff consists of one Administrative Associate. • 2006 (June) The Diversity Initiative Task Force, comprised of students, faculty & staff is appointed by the President to work with Vice President for Cultural Diversity. • 2006 A Diversity values statement and a Diversity strategy for the College completed by the Vice President, assisted by the Task Force. • 2006 (Dec.) College revises mission statement to acknowledge that Berklee was “founded on jazz and popular music rooted in the African cultural diaspora…”
Time Line continued… • 2007 (Oct.) Second full-time staff member hired as Program Manager - Multicultural Educator for the Office for Cultural Diversity. • 2007 Campus wide training sessions held on “Creating and Sustaining a Respectful Campus Community” required for all managers at the college. • 2007 Sexual harassment prevention workshops for all academic departments begins and are also required, completed by the end of 2008. • 2008 Third staff member hired as Project Coordinator. • 2008 All staff are trained on “Creating and Sustaining a Respectful Campus Community,” with a focus on cultural awareness and competence.
Time Line continued… • 2009 First Cultural Leadership Retreat held for students at the College by the Office for Cultural Diversity, facilitated by staff and faculty.
Training Roll-Out President’s Council Inclusion Training Managers’ Inclusion Training Faculty Sexual Harassment Training Staff Inclusion Training Managers’ TTT Departmental Inclusion Meetings
What We Would Keep About Our Approach • Commitment of College President • Collaboration between VP for Cultural Diversity, Academic Dean, VP for Human Resources • Diverse team of trainers • Curriculum • Small group setting
What We Would Change • More faculty/faculty union involvement in planning process • Joint communication from college leadership, union leadership and faculty chairs • More championship from Department Chairs • One longer session instead of two short sessions • Mix faculty from different departments • More data about faculty/student/staff experiences • Greater clarity about follow-up and accountability
Follow-up Activities • Department managers will have conversations with their direct reports based on the “Creating and Sustaining a Respectful College Community” training. • These conversation will be guided by the cultural styles worksheet presented during the training sessions • Based on these conversations, a series of action steps will be identified, as appropriate, for the department to ensure an environment of inclusion. • Challenges which are beyond the departments' ability to address will be forwarded to the Office of Diversity.
What is Culture? • A way of being • “Software of the mind” (Geert Hofstede) • “Beliefs, values, attitudes, behaviors of groups of interacting people; shared group identity.” (Milton Bennett)
Key Cultural Differences at Work Dimensions Thinking Style Work Relationships Competitiveness Time Self-Identity Communication Hierarchy/Power Conflict Motivation Flexibility
Communication Indirect Direct
Conflict Avoidance Confrontational
Status/Power Hierarchy Equality
Self-identity Collectivist Individualist
Time Multi-focus/Fluid Single-focus/Fixed
Activity • Make an X on the arrow representing your “default” cultural style on each dimension • Place a dot on the posted arrows corresponding to where you placed your X
Ibis Diversity Process 5. Evaluation • Evaluation based on milestones and metrics • Communicate progress • Recognize champions • Plan for future • Develop action plans • Establish metrics and accountability measures • Track progress 4. Implementation 4. Implementation Recruitment & Hiring Mentoring Curriculum Development Training/ Coaching Policies/ Procedures 3. Strategic Design • Develop strategic priorities based on findings of assessment • Communicate to all stakeholders • Incorporate into overall strategic planning 2. Assessment • Gather data: focus groups, interviews, surveys, personnel statistics • Assess organizational climate and systems • Identify supports and barriers to diversity and inclusion • Identify best practices and champions • Build buy-in and momentum 2. Assessment 1. Planning • Clarify goals and objectives • Determine strategy and assessment methodology • Develop communication plan • Initial meetings with senior leaders 1. Planning 1. Planning