The outgoing head of one of the USā leading business schools believes that āyou canāt quantifyā the importance of having diversity among students and faculty on campus.
Alison Davis-Blake, dean of the University of Michiganās Ross School of Business, told 51³Ō¹Ļ that there was a lot of āalignmentā among staff, employers and the student body around having a diverse campus.
āStudents want a diverse environment in which to learn, we know students learn better ā in the long-run ā in an environment thatās diverse,ā she said. āRecruiters want a diverse workforce. All constituents want a diverse campus and they want diversity to be addressed in the curriculum.ā
For the 2015-16 academic year, Ross has fully rolled out its āIdentity and Diversity in Organisation (IDO)ā programme, which all students on their single undergraduate degree are required to complete.
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Each year, students take seminars on one of three topics ā identity, diversity and organisations ā and write a reflection paper on each. The IDO, which is unique to Ross, aims to encourage self-awareness and Professor Davis-Blake said that the scheme is improving studentsā self-belief.
ā[In the] first year, people explore their own identity and they take one of many seminars that help them explore this,ā she said. āAnecdotally, students have really enjoyed this. They feel much more self-aware and that self-awareness is making them much more confident learners.ā
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Professor Davis-Blake added that diversity on campus isnāt simply about āhow many people we have of different typesā.
āThe issue is actually [about] inclusion,ā she said. āSome is around āwe should have more of type xā but the vast majority is around āwe have people of type x and thereās a problem with how theyāre being treated by others. They donāt feel welcome, empowered, part of the community.ā
āDiversity is, relatively speaking, easy to work on ā [in terms of] just getting numbers of people. Pushing all the levers that affect inclusion and how people feel and how others treat them, is much more difficult.ā
She said that was because āit includes not only what happens in the classroom. We can train faculty, and we do, about how to create an inclusive classroom but what happens when students walk out the door and thereās something in the hall? Thatās where weāre working.ā
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Diversity on campus is also reflected in Rossā faculty. The institution has achieved the highest proportion of female faculty who are tenured or on the road to tenure of any of the top 10 business schools, since Professor Davis-Blake became dean. It also has the highest percentage of tenured female professors.
Professor Davis-Blake says that changing the pattern involves breaking down unconscious stereotypes.
āYou have to have enough people who are successful,ā she said. āWhat changes stereotypes is repeated exposure to counter-stereotypical instances. Thatās why diversity is so important.ā
As an example, she said that if someone has a view that āwell, economics is really mathematics and thatās a manās fieldā and does not see any female academics working in the subject at an institution then they could āall too easily conclude that women donāt belong hereā.
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But āif I know 100 womenā working in a subject āand theyāre successful in various ways, that changes my mental map ā it does it without me knowing it or doing anythingā.
POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline:Ā Michigan business school dean on diversity drive
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