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Diversity Training

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What might you say that will convey the complaints without offending the student? ... this in a way that will not offend the student, but will also make the rules ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Diversity Training


1
Diversity Training
  • Troy University Housing and Residence Life Office

2
Activity
  • Diversity Scavenger Hunt

3
We all live with the objective of being happy
our lives are all different and yet the same.
  • Anne Frank

4
Everyone is entitled to their own opinion, but
not their own facts.
  • Daniel Patrick Moynihan

5
Activity
  • Diversity Dictionary

6
Diversity Dictionary
  • Diversity Composed of distinct or unlike
    elements or qualities.
  • Ethnicity of or relating to large groups of
    people classed according to common racial,
    national, tribal, religious, linguistic, or
    cultural origin or background.
  • Race A division of the human population
    distinguished by physical characteristics
    transmitted by genes.
  • Native Language The language spoken in the
    country of ones origin or birth.

7
Diversity Dictionary
  • Culture A particular form of civilization,
    specifically the beliefs, customs, arts, and
    institutions of a society at a given time.
  • Multicultural Of or including several cultures
    or ethnic groups.
  • Affiliation To associate, join , or connect
    with.
  • Values A standard or principal regarded as
    desirable or worthwhile.
  • Beliefs Something, as a tenet, that is
    believed a conviction.
  • Stereotype A conventional, highly simplified
    opinion, conception or belief.

8
Diversity and Multiculturalism
  • Any aspect that differentiates groups and people
    from one another.
  • Some of these aspects include
  • Race
  • Color and Ethnicity
  • Nationality and national origin
  • Ancestry

9
Diversity and Multiculturalism
  • Aspects continued
  • Gender and gender identity
  • Age
  • Religion
  • Physical and mental abilities
  • Sexual orientation
  • Socio-economic status

10
General Assumptions About Culture
  • Culture is not good or bad. It just is.
  • Often what may be considered just the way it is
    is culturally influenced.
  • Ones view of the world is shaped by values,
    perceptions, assumptions, and expectations.

11
General Assumptions About Culture
  • The more people know about their own culture, and
    the more they know about other cultures, the
    better the communication will be.
  • The way one sees or does things, when coupled
    with the way others do or see things, can lead to
    new improved ways of doing and seeing things.

12
General Assumptions About Culture
  • Being different is OK and differences can be
    recognized, acknowledged and cherished.
  • The responsibility for intellectual communication
    is not solely that of any one of the parties, but
    shared by all.

13
Activity
  • Diversity Change Agent
  • Self-Assessment

14
Communicating Across Cultures
  • Those of us who can study, work, and live with
    people from other cultures and races can enjoy
    more success in school, on the job, and in our
    neighborhoods.
  • This means learning new ways to think, speak, and
    act.

15
Communicating Across Cultures
  • Communicating across cultures opens up a myriad
    of possibilities and is an education in and of
    itself.
  • At first, it can be scary, frustrating, or even
    painful.
  • Done in the right way, it can also be exciting,
    enriching and affirming.

16
Communicating Across Cultures
  • If left ignored, communication differences will
    inevitably lead to various types of
    miscommunication which may lead, in turn, to
    conflicts which erode school climate and cause
    certain groups of students, usually African
    American and other nonwhite students to feel
    unwelcome.

17
Communicating Across Cultures
  • Removing language which appears to stereotype
    students.
  • Reducing violations of cultural rules during
    discussions and conversations.

18
Communicating Across Cultures
  • Be aware of words, images and situations that
    suggest that all or most members of a racial
    group are the same

19
Communicating Across Cultures
  • Avoid using qualifiers that reinforce racial and
    ethnic stereotypes.

20
Communicating Across Cultures
  • Avoid racial identification except when it is
    essential to communication

21
Communicating Across Cultures
  • Be aware of possible negative implications of
    color symbolism and usage that could offend
    people or reinforce bias.

22
Communicating Across Cultures
  • Avoid language that has questionable racial or
    ethnic connotations.

23
Communicating Across Cultures
  • Be aware of rules for attentiveness during
    conversation. I.e. eye contact. Some cultures
    consider it offensive to maintain direct eye
    contact during a conversations.

24
Communicating Across Cultures
  • Be aware of rules regarding the distance between
    speakers during conversation.
  • In some cultures, speakers stand close enough to
    touch. In other cultures, distance is maintained
    to denote respect.

25
Communicating Across Cultures
  • Be aware that objects, characters, and symbols
    may reflect different beliefs or values for
    different groups.
  • The confederate flag and Uncle Remus stories may
    offend African Americans because they reflect the
    culture of slavery and the Old South.

26
Communicating Across Cultures
  • Be aware that cultures may vary in what they
    consider humorous or taboo. Be careful with
    ethnic humor when those outside of your ethnic
    group may not understand or may be offended.

27
Communicating Across Cultures
  • Different cultures may use different standards
    for loudness, speed of delivery, silence,
    attentiveness, and the time in which it takes to
    respond to someone elses point.

28
The Key to Effective Diversity Initiatives is to
Realize that
  • No one can memorize all the rules of social
    interaction as they pertain to diversity issues.
  • These rules can be frustrating, because what
    offends one person may not offend another.
  • And, these can often run dangerously close to
    stereotyping, because not all people think alike,
    so each rule does not always apply.

29
The Key to Effective Diversity Initiatives is to
Realize that
  • Instead of focusing on avoiding offense, which
    can sometimes lead to unnecessary and excessive
    nervousness, we should focus on building a
    relationship based upon a willingness to learn
    about others and their culture.

30
The Key to Effective Diversity Initiatives is to
Realize that
  • You are responsible for being self aware of your
    own prejudices and attitude.
  • If someone offends you with an inappropriate
    comment, before reacting, you must ask yourself,
    was it on purpose or was it lack of knowledge of
    your culture.
  • Once this assessment has been made, you can
    carefully verbalize an appropriate response.

31
Scenarios
  • Volunteers needed to role play and offer
    appropriate responses and solutions to the
    following scenarios.

32
Scenario 1
  • You have had several complaints from residents
    about the unpleasant odor that is emitted
    whenever a student cooks in her room. After
    interviewing several of the complainants, you
    realize it is a dish that is indigenous to the
    students culture and she doesnt realize that it
    is offensive. How do you handle it? What might
    you say that will convey the complaints without
    offending the student?

33
Scenario 2
  • You have a white student that complains about the
    black guys next door blaring their rap music all
    of the time! The students are violating dorm
    rules, but the complainant has used racially
    offensive stereotypes. How do you handle this
    situation? What could you say to each party
    involved that would both solve the matter, and
    let the complainant know that he is using
    racially offensive language?

34
Scenario 3
  • Roommates African American female and Chinese
    female. The Chinese student comes to you and
    tells you she has heard from several of the other
    dorm residents that her roommate has been making
    racial slurs about her behind her back, and she
    wants to move to another room. What do you do?
    What do you say to each student without offending
    either of them?

35
Scenario 4
  • You have an international student that repeatedly
    breaks the rule of signing guests in and out of
    the dorm. You have warned the student on two
    separate occasions. Both times, the student
    claims he did not understand. In other words, it
    was a language barrier. What do you do next? How
    do you handle this in a way that will not offend
    the student, but will also make the rules clear
    in the future?

36
Human diversity makes tolerance more than a
virtue it makes it a requirement for survival.
  • Rene Dubos
  • Celebration of Life, 1981

37
Thank you for your attention and participation
  • If you would like a copy of this PowerPoint
    presentation, please put your Troy University
    email on the list that is circulating.
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