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Imagine you're working on a class project for school or meeting a project deadline for work.
How do you value each person’s input and feedback to encourage cultural diversity and foster inclusion?
Diversity and inclusion are used together to talk about the culture of an organization, but they're not the same.
So...
How do you know you have a diverse group of people while also celebrating everyone's unique background? 💡
Do people in the group feel supported? 💡
Knowing the difference between the two can help you understand if your classroom, workplace, or in any setting includes diversity and inclusion.
What is "Diversity"?
Internal diversity — any trait or quality that a person is born with.
Gender
Physical abilities
Ethnicity
External diversity — values or experiences that shape a person's identity.
Social economic background
Religious practices
Education
Marital status
Location
Organizational diversity — a group of people with different job experiences (past or present).
Job functions
Management Level
Work experience
Worldview diversity — a group of people with a variety of interpretations of the world.
Range of beliefs
Political affiliations
Culture
Travel experiences
Diversity in the Workplace
Knowledge Check: Diversity⚡
A company is looking into diversifying its web developer team. All of the team members were hired from the University of Washington aged between 27 and 32 years old all with computer science degrees. What can they do to bring more diversity to the team?
A. Hire team members from different educational and social economic backgrounds.
B. Recruit team members with computer science degrees from other universities.
C. Onboard team members with a variety of experience as engineers, writers, designers, etc.
D. Recruit a team member from the University of Washington who has a background in Information Technology.
Quiz
What can they do to bring more diversity to the team? Check all that apply.
Hiring team members from different educational, social, and economic backgrounds with a variety of experiences will make the team more diverse. Recruiting one team member also from the University of Washington, though having a slightly different background, will not be enough to enhance the team's diversity.
What is "Inclusion"?
Inclusion is how you make people from different backgrounds, genders, ethnicity, sexual orientation, and religion "feel like they belong."
Imagine you’re with your friends having fun. Being inclusive means being free to celebrate each person’s unique differences in ethnicity, gender identity, and culture, but feeling great that you’re accepted and belong together as part of that friendship.
The Harvard Business Review measures "inclusion" within an organization based on 7 key dimensions:
Fair treatment — are employees rewarded and recognized fairly for achievements?
Integrating differences — are employees' opinions respected and valued?
Decision making — are employees' ideas and suggestions considered fairly?
Psychological safety — are employees allowed free expression of their feelings?
Trust — can employees communicate about the organization honestly?
Belonging — do employees feel that the organization cares?
Diversity — does executive management represent the diverse workforce?
Diversity and Inclusion in a Classroom
Inclusion in a school looks like:
Teachers checking their biases with resources
Model inclusive language in examples (ie. gender-inclusive, person-first/identity-first language, etc.)
Provide a variety of opportunities for students to participate (ie. writing, small group chat, etc.)
Encourage and respect students' honest thoughts and expressions
Did you know?
Knowledge Check: Inclusion ⚡
In the workplace, you may find an environment that:
A. Provides access to resources, opportunities, and support.
B. Recruites job candidates from diverse backgrounds.
C. Has leaders and managers who listen and communicate with honesty.
D. Encourages employees to express themselves and listen to their colleagues' needs.
Quiz
Which of these items are signs of Inclusion? Check all that apply.
Providing access to resources, opportunities, and support allows people from all different backgrounds to understand all rules and agendas regardless of their background. Inclusion means being open to communication among teammates and leaders, and managers. Recruiting candidates from different backgrounds will help your organization with diversity but not inclusion.
Take Action
Think about how you can promote diversity and inclusion in your setting. Now that you know the difference between "diversity" and "inclusion", how can you bring it into your classroom, workplace, or any setting?
This Byte has been authored by
Shawn Fan
Instructional Designer