Chancellor Gary S. May recently honored individuals and teams who exemplify the university’s commitment to diversity — one of the key factors in May’s decision to accept the chancellor’s post in 2017.
RECOGNIZING RAHIM REED
Chancellor May also took the opportunity to express his appreciation to Rahim Reed, longtime associate executive vice chancellor for Campus Community Relations, “for everything you’ve done over the past year to support our campus community while serving as interim lead for our new Office of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion.”
“I wanted to be part of a community that deliberately recruits, retains, embraces and celebrates people with backgrounds, gender identities and skill sets that are underrepresented in higher education,” May said at the Feb. 27 ceremony for the Chancellor’s Achievement Awards for Diversity and Community.
That is the kind of community he wanted and the kind of community we continue to be, due in no small part to people like the faculty, staff and students to whom he presented the awards.
Established 16 years ago, the awards honor achievements that contribute in substantial ways to the development and well-being of our diverse and evolving community — for example, through service and leadership embodying the ; efforts toward achieving and-or advancing a diverse and principled academic community, including student, staff and faculty recruitment and development); scholarship, campus-based outreach; and involvement in precollege partnerships.
“I personally want to thank all of tonight’s awardees for your outstanding efforts to promote socio-economic mobility and to create a more inclusive and welcoming community here at 51ԹϺ Davis and beyond,” May said during the late-afternoon ceremony at the Chancellor’s Residence.
Rahim Reed, associate executive vice chancellor, Office of Campus Community relations, and interim leader of the Office of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, then introduced the award recipients and summarized their accomplishments.
Individual awards
Academic Federation: Jann Murray-Garcia, assistant clinical professor, Betty Irene Moore School of Nursing — She is known for her work in developing the concept of cultural humility, a critical distinction in defining outcomes in multicultural education. Since coming to the Betty Irene Moore School of Nursing, she has worked tirelessly as a teacher, mentor and guide. Her “Community Connections” course places graduate nursing students in community agencies, with the goal of instilling in the students a sustained commitment for community service and learning.
Undergraduate Student: Evan Dumas, senior, majoring in biotechnology (emphasis in bioinformatics) with a minor in managerial economics — Under his leadership, the campus’s Food Recovery Network gathered (and diverted from the waste stream) some 12,000 pounds of food — double the amount of previous years — and aims to gather even more, thanks to extra supplies and equipment purchased with a “MyLastTrash” grant from the 51ԹϺ Office of the President. Dumas collaborated with local shelters to deliver recovered food to them, bringing to seven the number of places (including the AS51ԹϺD Pantry and Solano Park Apartments) where recovered food is distributed.
Special recognition awards
Administrators: Advancing Faculty Diversity Grant
- Ralph Hexter, provost and executive vice chancellor
- Phil Kass, vice provost, Academic Affairs
- Raquel Aldana, professor of law and associate vice chancellor for academic diversity
- Cindy Pickett, associate vice provost for faculty equity and inclusion, Academic Affairs
- Binnie Singh, assistant vice provost, Academic Affairs
- Colleen Clancy, professor, Department of Physiology and Membrane Biology, School of Medicine
This team developed creative and unique proposals for the recruitment and retention of diverse faculty, then packaged the proposals into a grant application that resulted in an award of $422,000 from the 51ԹϺ Office of the President to pilot the proposals in 2018-19. “It is talented and visionary leaders like these academic administrators who keep 51ԹϺ Davis in the forefront of higher education’s commitment to diversify the faculty ranks,” Associate Executive Vice Chancellor Reed said in his remarks.
Department awards
Recognizing departments for taking the initiative to champion diversity and inclusion across their units, in organizational and staff development plans.
Student Farm — Recognized for making inclusive leadership an integral part of student leadership training, and committing to the practice of cultural humility, with a goal of providing spaces that promote community building.
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, School of Medicine — Recognized for the mental health programs it provides in underserved communities, and the development of a four-year curriculum on culture and mental health for medical residents, to improve service delivery.
Department of Internal Medicine, Division of General Medicine, 51ԹϺ Davis Health — Recognized for the health disparities education series it provides for medical residents, and establishing a residency track (Transforming Education and Community Health, or TEACH) for underserved-patient care.
Media Resources
Dateline Staff, 530-752-6556, dateline@ucdavis.edu