Episode Summary
Diversity, equity, and inclusion continue to be critical issues for higher education. Many of these issues are fanned by repercussions of historical events as well as unconscious biases based on unknown U.S. history and individuals tending to remain in monolithic groups. Institutions of higher education have a duty to make their campuses a model of inclusivity where every student, faculty member and staff member is wholeheartedly appreciated. To achieve this, higher education leaders need to find ways to surface their own unconscious biases, diversify campus leadership, create programs and structures to encourage diversity, identify ways to have accountability for these programs and create financial avenues to fund these efforts.
Taking this inclusive approach can revitalize organizations through creating a common understanding, developing a community that embraces differences and establishing new and meaningful outcomes. This can include: rethinking faculty diversity in relation to faculty recruitment, retention, tenure and promotion; revising ideas of the quality of scholarship, including the paradigm of publish or perish; and creating community-engaged scholarship.
Diversifying Higher Education Leaders
Many higher education institutions have become very comfortable (and even robotic) concerning the diversity narrative. This often is determined by the culture of the institution and its cultural artifacts.
However, the biggest driver of this narrative is the institution\u2019s president, and how this individual embodies the ideas and promise of inclusivity. This idea extends past the individual\u2019s DNA to include how they actually show up in their role. Students \u2013 especially undergraduates \u2013 can tell if a president is authentic and being honest in relation to diversity, equity, and inclusion. This is one of the greatest threats to higher education leaders right now; presidents and chancellors are realizing that they need to have the personal capacity to handle the struggles and opportunities that come with diversity. Therefore, it\u2019s important to get more diversity in higher education leadership positions, as these individuals bring a very specific level of consciousness based on their lived experiences.
Gaining Momentum
When faced with successive leadership moments around an issue, a president can decide what he or she is going to stand for. Then, the president can work with vice presidents and deans to set a priority for these things to take place, thus putting together an institutional effort across the various areas.\xa0 The president can create a structure and the associated environment where direct reports know that this is something that matters. Additionally, the president as chief executive officer of the institution can communicate the importance of these efforts.\xa0
The board also needs to be involved. Board members need to be diverse and have experience with diversity in their professional lives. These trustees need to be committed to the common good for both the institution and society. Without these types of board members, the president will have difficulty moving these issues forward.
Working with the board chair, the president can make the effort an institutional priority, including having initiative progress measured as part of the president\u2019s performance review. This will help create accountability, which then can extend to the president\u2019s direct reports, including the vice president of business and finance, chief operating officer, the provost office and student services.
Dealing with Unconscious Bias
Much of the United States\u2019 public education system has done a poor job of teaching history that includes all cultures and identities for the last 30-40 years. Americans have a very narrow story of history, which is reinforced by a tendency for individuals to remain in a monolithic community. While many higher education professionals \u2013 including senior leaders -- are doing good work, they don\u2019t know what they don\u2019t know in areas of diversity, equity, and inclusion, and can get defensive because they aren\u2019t aware of their unconscious biases.
Dealing Effectively with Discomfort
Higher education institutions haven\u2019t developed their truth-telling capacity because of the lack of knowledge of history or because the campus environment is created and maintained by leaders who are part of the dominant culture who maintain the same degree of comfort and engagement. Without diversity among institutional leaders, an environment emerges in which conversations are limited by individuals\u2019 lived experiences. When those in academic settings don\u2019t have knowledge of something, they stumble or withdraw and move to the next thing. This can lead to defensiveness and debate. If the leader hasn\u2019t built up the mental and emotional muscles to identify, carry and push through the discomfort of a challenging or difficult topic, opportunities will be continually missed.
Wholehearted Leadership
Valuing people wholeheartedly is a critical part of diversity, equity, and inclusion. Higher education leaders also are called to be appreciative and reflective to determine patterns of how they have left people behind historically.
Diversity is all about representation so that everyone feels good and is welcome on campus. Inclusion means that everyone has a part in it. Equity requires leaders to reconcile the ways in which departments, programs, and organizations operate. This includes identifying when the institution has not fulfilled its mission and identifying the gap between marketing and the actual lived experience.
Faculty, staff, and students know when they have a leader who is really in their corner and really is committed to these ideals.\xa0 Equity asks these top leaders to address an identified priority through reconciling the institution and its mission as well as the ways it has not been fulfilled. This type of leadership makes a mark in the area of diversity and inclusion and also leaves a legacy.
Reconciling the Past
Colleges and universities \u2013 including leaders and faculty \u2013 need to do a better job telling the truth and reconciling their past in relation to diversity. For example, Georgetown University had to come to terms with its history where Jesuit priests sold 272 slaves to slave traders to secure the future of the university. In 2017, institutional leaders held a public ceremony in which they publicly apologized to the descendants of those slaves, some of whom were campus leaders or people who had been educated at Georgetown. This type of truth-telling leads to more respect, particularly from communities that previously have been marginalized.
By telling the truth, leaders can help the higher education community reconcile the past to make the community whole and then imagine a better future. The residual of not telling the truth is significant. Therefore, it\u2019s important for anchor institutions like universities and colleges to continue to maintain our place and step even more boldly into the role of taking a moral positionality.\xa0 Public institutions as well as faith-based schools can do this. The United States needs institutions such as colleges and universities to join with anchor institutions such as public libraries and other community-based institutions to provide leadership that is morally and principally based.
A New Framework for Expanding Leadership Pipeline
Utilizing a new frame for identifying aspiring leaders can break patterns that have led to the same types of leaders being placed repeatedly and historically in higher education\u2019s leadership pipeline. Instead, institutions need to look at aspiring leaders\u2019 cultural assets, cultural wealth and lived experiences to expand the leadership spectrum.
Three Tips for Higher Education Leaders
Higher education leaders should consider:
Bullet Points
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