“At ٺƵ, we acknowledge and honor exemplary faculty, staff, students and community members who help to cultivate an atmosphere of inclusiveness. They speak to the heart of what makes our campus and region a great place to work, teach, learn, play and live.”
PRINCIPLES OF COMMUNITY WEEK
The , which are among the underpinnings of the Chancellor’s Achievement Awards for Diversity and Community, get some recognition of their own next week — during our annual Principles of Community Week, Feb. 26-March 3.
Networking luncheons will be held on the Davis and Sacramento campuses, while the Davis campus also will be the venue for Multicultural Awareness Night, the Latino Film Festival and Dialogue on Allyship.
This is part of what Gary S. May had to say Feb. 6 in presenting the 2018 Chancellor’s Achievement Awards for Diversity and Community to eight individuals — in the categories of Academic Senate, Academic Federation, undergraduate, graduate student, postdoctoral, staff, special recognition and community — and three departments.
The awards ceremony took place in the early evening at the Chancellor’s Residence. “This event is a perfect way to cap my workday,” May said. “The spirit of these awards speaks to me deeply on a personal and professional level” — as a college student who remembers well the feeling of being the only person of color in the lecture halls and laboratories, and as an engineering professor and dean working hard to change that, especially for students from ethnic groups that are underrepresented in the STEM fields.
“ٺƵ’ strong commitment to diversity is one of the key reasons I wanted to come here,” May said. “I wanted to be part of a community that deliberately recruits, retains, embraces and celebrates people with backgrounds, gender identities and skill sets that are underrepresented in higher education. I wanted to be part of a community that honors the promoters of socio-economic mobility who we are celebrating today.”
Here are the 2018 award recipients, with comments about them condensed from nomination forms and remarks from the awards ceremony, delivered by Rahim Reed, associate executive vice chancellor, Office of Campus Community Relations.
Individual award recipients
Academic Senate: Natalia Deeb-Sossa
Academic Federation: Jorge Garcia
Undergraduate: Samantha Chiang
Graduate Student: Hung Doan
Postdoctoral: Lauren Libero
Staff Award: Lina Mendez
Special Recognition: Barbara Ashby
Community Achievement: Cassandra Jennings
Honorary awards
The campus introduced this category last year to recognize departments and divisions for taking the initiative to include training in diversity and inclusion as part of organizational and staff development.
“These efforts are in support of the ٺƵ Diversity and Inclusion Initiative, and it is our hope that the campus community will be inspired by these organizations’ proactive measures in operationalizing our Principles of Community, and in striving towards a more diverse and inclusive ٺƵ,” Reed said.
The newest honorees:
ٺƵ Health Information Technology Division — It has worked with ٺƵ Health’s Office for Equity, Diversity and Inclusion the last two years to offer diversity and inclusion training to 70 IT supervisors. Management training includes “The Impact of Unconscious Bias on Workplace Teams” and “Understanding Generational Differences” to help improve communication, teamwork and employee engagement. Individual teams are encouraged to arrange their own trainings, say, with speakers from the Harassment and Discrimination Assistance and Prevention Program, or HDAPP. The Office for Equity, Diversity and Inclusion will host four Diversity and Inclusion Dialogues for the IT division to assist in building a culture of lifelong learning in diversity and inclusion.
Editor's note about the photo caption and award summary above: As originally published, we gave the incorrect title of the unit being honored. It is the ٺƵ Health Information Technology Division, as corrected above. We apologize for the error.
— This is a one-year program designed to help educationally and/or socio-economically disadvantaged students become more competitive applicants to medical school. The program partners with the Office of Campus Community Relations for sessions on unpacking oppression, microaggressions and stereotype threat, and weaves these topics into conversations about understanding diversity, and to further develop students’ critical thinking skills. The Postbaccalaureate Program participates in the Campus Community Book Project to further inform students’ understanding of equity issues and how they translate to the health care fields. Elio A. Gutierrez, program coordinator, accepted the award, which also recognized Jose A. Morfin of the Department of Nephrology.
— All leads and managers undergo professional development training on “Understanding Diversity,” “Anti-Bullying,” Cross-Cultural Communication” and “Conflict Management,” all meant to encourage staff to live and practice the Principles of Community at work, among colleagues, and with the campus community members they serve. Student Housing and Dining Services also ensures that their student staff, especially those who work in advising capacities, are exposed to the Campus Community Book Project, integrating the chosen book as part of student staff training.
Photos by Linda Mijangos/Office of Campus Community Relations
Media Resources
Dateline Staff, 530-752-6556, dateline@ucdavis.edu