Taking steps toward inclusivity
Learn what it takes to work toward becoming inclusive with steps toward the four Intergroup Dialogue (IGD) goals:
- Showing inclusivity
- Becoming inclusive
- Engaging in inclusivity
- Building alliances
Learn what it takes to work toward becoming inclusive with steps toward the four Intergroup Dialogue (IGD) goals:
Seek clarity with open-ended questions.
Avoid filling the blank space with prejudices and biases.
Allow space and time to listen, hear, and learn.
It’s their experience, not yours. Value others’ truths.
Use appropriate body language, word choice, and tone of voice.
Be mindful of choice, action, and thought, and be present.
What experiences do I carry that still hurt and impact my awareness today?
Examine passed-on feelings, views of others, and perceptions of conflict, fear, and change.
How does sharing and learning from one another prepare us for deeper conversations?
Replace anxiety with time and space for re-learning. Explore values that may be common to us all
Experiences are perceptions. Redefine and redress equality for all.
Be vulnerable enough to share your experiences and mistakes. Express emotions honestly.
Seek to understand others’ perspectives through respectful questions and challenges to thinking.
Listen for the new ways to recognize our own challenges.
Get motivated to change and bridge differences. Who, how, and what can help bridge divides we experience and see?
Establish a communication process for newness and difference.
Display a welcoming nature (and mean it). Be willing to help and appreciate differences.
We build friendships through time and space. Inclusivity requires the same. Be sure to continually check in.
Invite conversation by sharpening skills in empathy, active thinking, and openness to multiple perspectives.
Create space to build groups supporting the change you want to see.
How you respond and feel impacts those around you and the change that results.
Give time to foster the needed relationships and development.
Engage in and outside the classroom, in your workplace, and in your community to promote societal change and political will.