Submission: College Diversity Initiative would promote unbiased thinking

My first reaction when I heard about the new College Diversity Initiative was, “What? What could possibly be the point of another vote when we just had one in 2012 and that proposal was defeated, although, sadly, just 29 percent of eligible faculty voted two years ago?”

I thought I understood some of the arguments against the proposal there already were too many undergraduate course requirements, progress to a degree could be affected, there is no proven value to such courses, it would “force-feed” undergraduates material they have no interest in, it could waste faculty resources and students’ time and money, there is no need since we live in a “post-racial” society. But after reading through the new diversity proposal and doing some research on my own, I found no credible support for any of those suppositions.

A perusal of mass media on any given day reveals the extent to which violence and other conflicts at home and abroad derive from cross-cultural and cross-class assumptions, prejudices and misunderstandings. Among our responsibilities as UCLA faculty is to help diminish narrow, egocentric worldviews that come from a lack of understanding and empathy for people different from ourselves.

A recent article in the Scientific American by Victoria Plaut, “3 Myths Plus a Few Best Practices for Achieving Diversity,” reports on a spate of recent studies demonstrating that “unconscious” racial, ethnic and gender bias can have profound effects on behavior, and that “merely caring about diversity is not enough” to overcome biased thinking. This is why so many U.S. institutions of higher learning, including all of the UCs except for UCLA and UC Merced have diversity course requirements.

But can classroom-based diversity education help ameliorate the sorry state of affairs beyond campus settings? Extensive empirical research shows that courses that introduce undergraduates to diversity concepts and issues contribute demonstratively to cognitive development, openness to having one’s views challenged, ability to cooperate across differences and work through controversial issues, civic engagement and the amelioration of racial, ethnic and gender-based tensions.

There are more prosaic reasons for our undergraduates to become more cognizant of diversity issues. A 2010 survey by the Association of American Colleges and Universities on the competencies employers seek in recent graduates found a large majority wanted graduates to have “knowledge of human cultures and the physical and natural world.” Furthermore, the National Science Foundation and National Institutes of Health now require that a variety of categories of research proposals specify how diversity will be incorporated or addressed.

As to whether students’ progress to degree will be affected, the diversity initiative proposal indicates that it would not, based on its assessment of demand and seat capacity from nearly 100 syllabi submitted this summer by interested faculty. In addition, Chancellor Gene Block has committed resources for developing additional diversity-related courses.

Indeed, the entire UCLA administration has demonstrated deep support for this initiative. I urge you to do the same and vote for the College Diversity Initiative.

Browner is a research professor for the departments of anthropology and gender studies at UCLA and the Center for Culture and Health of the Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior.

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1 Comment

  1. Dear Daily Bruin,

    Please, Faculty of UCLA…I urge you to vote with the understanding that this initiative will help current and future Bruins become more successful participants in our globalized world of interaction, and it seeks to assist with what Universities have always sought to do, from the inception of this model of education. Promote critical thinking.

    When students go back out into the world as professionals, whether as entrepreneurs, employees, investors or what have you, almost all of us will all be faced with individuals and cultures that have values and perspectives that are quite different from our own. That is the challenge and the beauty of living in an ever-globalized world.

    I have to qualify “almost all of us” because it is quite possible in our tailored information market to restrict interactions and information accumulation only to arguments we agree with and interact only with people of similar means and experiences. If I were to only watch MSNBC or only watch Fox News I would get a very specific perspective without much, if any, impact from other points of views. But that is a very select few who would go that extraordinary extra mile to disconnect themselves from the rest of the world and internalize their experiences to only the immediate of what they know and want to know. I posit that It is crucial to engage with cosmopolitanism or lose serious competitive advantage to other people who do engage with it and seek to understand the intricacies of our ever-more connected planet.

    Best,

    Matthew P. FitzGerald
    J.D. Candidate UCLA Law Class of 2017
    B.A. International Studies, Conc: Global Health & Italian Studies, University of Washington-Seattle June 2012

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