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In Pursuit of Transformative Diversity

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Title: In Pursuit of Transformative Diversity


1
In Pursuit of Transformative Diversity
  • July 26th 2006
  • Rebecca Reno
  • Research Associate, Kirwan Institute for the
    Study of Race and Ethnicity
  • The Ohio State University
  • http//www.kirwaninstitute.org/

2
Diversity
  • What do we mean by diversity?
  • When does diversity matter?
  • What is the current dominant public understanding
    of diversity?
  • Why does diversity matter?
  • How can we achieve Transformative Diversity in
    the Classroom?

3
Defining Diversity
4
What do we mean by diversity?
  • Broad term
  • Socially constructed
  • Current divisions not natural
  • Since they are socially constructed, they require
    deliberate, targeted interventions
  • Not numerically alone (although important)
    Pursuing Transformative Diversity.
  • What does a diverse classroom look like?

5
When does diversity matter?
  • Power
  • Determines access to resources
  • Persons position in relation to social
    structures can confer distinct advantage
    disadvantage
  • When social arrangements limit it
  • Past AND current institutions and structures
    impede access to the university

6
Opportunity Structure
7
(No Transcript)
8
Children and Schools
High Opportunity
Low Opportunity
9
Effects of Low-Income Schools
  • Low-income students attending middle-class
    schools perform higher, on average, than
    middle-class children attending high-poverty
    schools

Source The Century Foundation (2004). Can
Separate Be Equal? www.tcf.org
10
SES Diversity
  • For the 2004 incoming freshman at Ohio State, the
    median parental income was more than 75,000. In
    Ohio in 2004, the median family income was only
    42,240.
  • 6.2 of these students' parents earned 25,000 or
    less. In contrast, 28.6 of Ohio's population
    earned below 25,000.
  • Finally, 7 earned 200,000 or more, while only
    1.8 of Ohio's households earned 200,000 or
    more.

11
Racial Diversity
12
Faculty Diversity-2003
Population Data from the American Community
Survey, 2003. Faculty Data from the National
Center for Education Statistics, 2003.
13
Diversity Data for Faculty and Staff- 2005
  • At Ohio State, Black professors constitute only
    2 of the total, numbering only 23.
  • In contrast, white professors hold 85 of the
    positions.
  • 82.6 of professors are male, while only 17.4
    were female.
  • Overall, across all faculty positions, Whites
    outnumber Black faculty 23 to 1, and Hispanic
    faculty 36 to 1

Source http//www.ohr.ohio-state.edu/MIAR/div/Uni
v05.PDF
14
Retention at OSU
15
Challenging the Dominant Public Understanding of
Diversity
16
Framing Inequities
  • Common explanations of inequities and disparity
  • Personal/Cultural Failure The dominant,
    historical perspective in American society that
    emphasizes poverty as a result of personal or
    family failure to take advantage of opportunities
    or lack of motivation
  • Structural Failures A frame that recognizes
    poverty as the result of inequitable access to
    opportunities necessary to generate wealth and
    succeed

17
Current Status of Disparities

1 Table http//www.csmonitor.com/2003/0328/p01
s01-usju.html Source data US Census and US Labor
Department.
18
Defining Merit its Impact on Diversity
  • Meritocracy- Heavy weight on test scores in
    admissions leaves students to feel they are in
    school because they deserve to be there.
  • Programs such as affirmative action seen as
    coming at the expense of excellence

19
Responsibility of Public Education
  • OSU, as a land grant institution shares a common
    public mission to advance knowledge, to promote
    understanding and to train leaders to serve
    society
  • OSUs mission
  • To advance the WELL-BEING of the people of Ohio
    and the global community through the creation and
    dissemination of knowledge.
  • Two of the core values listed
  • Open the WORLD to our students.
  • Celebrate and learn from our DIVERSITY.

20
Public Education in a Democracy
  • Public education has a responsibility to the
    public- particularly to create and sustain a
    truly democratic society
  • The U.S. Supreme Court has identified the
    objective of pubic education as the "inculcation
    of fundamental values necessary to the
    maintenance of a democratic political system."
    -Ambach v. Norwick, 441 U.S. 68, 76-77 (1979)

21
Ohio States Core Values
  • How do we open the world to students when our
    university is not reflective of the nation
    outside the school?
  • Similarly, how can we experience and learn from
    diversity if we do not achieve both numerical AND
    transformative diversity?
  • Need to examine and shift admission and classroom
    practices to achieve the universitys mission if
    diversity is a goal

22
Diversity Matters
23
Why at the University Level?
  • At the time of adolescence, personal, social, and
    political identity is formed. (Erikson)
  • A diverse and discontinuous environment can have
    a profound impact on an adolescents identity.
  • Peer influence is critical.
  • Subsequent follow-ups of these students,
    moreover, showed that the attitudes formed during
    the college experience were quite stable, even 50
    years later (Newcomb)

24
Diversitys Effect on Attitudes
  • Recent research shows that attending an
    integrated school with diversity an integral part
    of the curriculum leads to the following, for all
    students
  • Reduced prejudice
  • Increased perspective taking
  • Opportunities to interact in deeper ways with
    those who are different
  • Stronger commitment to multiculturalism and
    promoting racial understanding
  • A long-term positive impact on cognitive
    development and academic growth

Chang, M. J. (Winter 1996). Who benefits from
racial diversity in higher education? Diversity
Digest. Conrad, B. D. (1988). Cooperative
learning and prejudice reduction. Social
Education, 52, 283-286. Mickelson, R. (2003). The
academic consequences of desegregation and
segregation. North Carolina Law Review, 81,
1513-1562. Astin, A. (March/April 1993).
Diversity and multiculturalism on the campus How
are students affected? Change.
25
Diversitys Effect on Academic Achievement
  • These same environmental characteristics have
    long-term positive impacts on students,
    including
  • Higher completion rates of college
  • Greater overall college satisfaction
  • Higher college GPA
  • Greater intellectual and social self-confidence
  • Students learn more and think in deeper, more
    complex ways in a diverse educational
    environment.
  • - Expert Report of Patricia Gurin for Grutter,
    et al. v. Bollinger, et al.

Chang, M. J. (Winter 1996). Who benefits from
racial diversity in higher education? Diversity
Digest. Conrad, B. D. (1988). Cooperative
learning and prejudice reduction. Social
Education, 52, 283-286. Mickelson, R. (2003). The
academic consequences of desegregation and
segregation. North Carolina Law Review, 81,
1513-1562. Astin, A. (March/April 1993).
Diversity and multiculturalism on the campus How
are students affected? Change.
26
Corporate Government Support for Diversity
  • 65 Fortune 500 companies and the U.S. military
    submitted amicus briefs in Grutter stating their
    need for employees who had exposure to widely
    diverse people, cultures, ideas and viewpoints.
  • The Supreme Court ruled that integrated,
    equitable education is a necessity for the
    American economic system and national security

Bikson, T.K. Law, S.A. (1994). Global
preparedness and human resources. Santa Monica,
CA RAND Institute on Education and Training.
(Brief for Amici Curiae, 65 Leading American
Businesses in Support of Respondents, Grutter v.
Bollinger, 2003)
27
Linked Fate Why We Should Care About Diversity
and Equity
  • Why should those who are not marginalized care
    about diversity and equity?
  • A nation and all its residents share a linked
    fate
  • This issue is particularly important today
  • To thrive, a nation must be competitive in the
    global economy
  • Disparities make the region less competitive,
    nationally and globally

28
Democratic Implications of Failing to Achieve
Diversity
  • Universities as gatekeepers to our democracy
  • Our inequitable arrangements are making it
    difficult, if not impossible to achieve either
    legitimate education or a true democracy
  • Without full diversity we are not adequately
    preparing students for citizenship in our nation,
    or our global society
  • Diversity is needed to do so- diversity as
    excellence

29
Inequitable Higher Education as a Failure of True
Democracy
  • Education is perhaps the most important crucible
    for remedying disparities, enhancing life
    opportunities, and promoting a genuine
    multiracial and multi-ethnic democracy.
  • -john a. powell

30
Achieving Transformative Diversity in the
Classroom
31
Achieving Transformative Diversity
  • Include the voices, viewpoints, and learning
    styles of all students

32
Creating a Supportive Space
  • Contact theory suggests in order to most
    effectively impact self-esteem and cultural
    fluency, there must be noncompetitive,
    collaborative contact between students with equal
    status from diverse backgrounds.

33
Achieving Transformative Diversity in the
Classroom
  • What is talked about in the classroom is not only
    important, but also how explore your comfort
    level discussing issues of diversity.
  • Dont assume one person can speak for everyone
  • Acknowledge everyones lived experiences
  • Avoid tokenization. If it does occur, highlight
    within group difference
  • If class is not diverse, think of creative ways
    to expose students to diversity

34
Achieving Diversity in the Classroom
  • Set explicit goals to achieve transformative
    diversity in the classroom
  • Challenge students thinking and increase their
    cultural fluency
  • Prepare student for their responsibilities in an
    interdependent world, making them better citizens
  • Develop the attitudes and values necessary for
    participation in a democratic society.
  • Support all students in reaching higher levels of
    academic achievement
  • Educate and prepare students to work actively
    toward structural equality by providing the
    knowledge and skills for the redistribution of
    power and opportunity among diverse groups

35
Resources
  • Utilize university resources
  • FTAD
  • Support services for students (handout)
  • Use movies, articles, activities to facilitate
    discussions around stereotypes and prejudice
  • Crash
  • Skin Deep
  • Tatum, Beverly Daniel. (2003). Why Are All the
    Black Kids Sitting Together in the Cafeteria? A
    Psychologist Explains the Development of Racial
    Identity. New York Basic Books.
  • Privilege Exercise

36
Go Beyond Diversity in the Classroom
  • Achieving transformative diversity within a
    classroom is a critical first step, however it is
    a step
  • To achieve true diversity within a classroom for
    the long-term, we must confront those structures
    that limit it in the first place

37
Questions or Comments? For More Information
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