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Moving Forward from the Diversity Summit

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Lorne Fultonberg

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Lorne Fultonberg
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Lorne.Fultonberg@du.edu

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303 871-2660

CCESL works to ensure the event is a launching pad for meaningful action

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CCESL fellow Morgan Stevens, right, participates in a roundtable discussion during the Diversity Summit's Call to Action session.
CCESL fellow Morgan Stevens, right, participates in a roundtable discussion during the Diversity Summit's Call to Action session

Note: This article was updated on Feb. 8, 2021.听

After hours of listening to powerful keynote addresses and insightful panels, it was time to start talking.

Seated at round tables in the Cable Center, attendees of 快活app鈥檚 annual听Diversity Summit听shared both lunch and ideas, trying to tackle the biggest question of the two-day event: 鈥淲hat鈥檚 next?鈥

鈥淚t's a really exciting opportunity to take the things you鈥檝e been learning and grappling with over the course of the summit and translate that into answers,鈥 said Anne DePrince, director of the听Center for Community Engagement to advance Scholarship and Learning (CCESL),听which sponsored the Call to Action Working Lunch Friday afternoon. 鈥淥ur goal is to continue many of the conversations that have been under way for the last day and a half.鈥

As people walked through the door, they chose to sit at themed tables. Each focused on one of 10 different themes related to community service, research, teaching and identifying community needs, among others.

Faculty, staff, students and community members intermingled, getting to know one another while sharing their perspectives on summit events. Fellows and members of the CCESL program sat in too, encouraging and prompting dialogue.

鈥淵ou have a lot of ideas that are sparked, but you wonder: 鈥極K, how can I actually go out and make an impact?鈥欌 said Lauren Collins, a graduate student and CCESL fellow. 鈥淐ommunity engagement is a way to start making a difference. People find they actually have common ground with people who are different than them, and then you can work together to make a change.鈥

After lunch, many participants stuck around to continue the dialogue, working to tackle what 快活app calls听听Groups comprising all segments of the University and greater community collaborated to identify pressing issues and develop the first steps to solving them.

Sometimes, conversation didn鈥檛 come easy.

鈥淚 think you have to be comfortable with silence for a little bit,鈥 Collins said. 鈥淚 think we鈥檙e way too used to people just jumping in, and it takes a while to think about and formulate ideas. [It鈥檚 important to] have the right amount of time to get to know people, have them sit with ideas and start talking.鈥

DePrince calls it 鈥渋ntentional relationship building,鈥 which she considers critical to organizing and understanding the self-interests of others.

鈥淚t's not about the ivory tower deciding we鈥檙e going to do something this way and hope everybody likes it,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t's change听with听communities. Not change听for听communities or change听to听communities, but this collaboration. It's about sharing risk and sharing benefits and sharing responsibility.鈥