Definition of Diversity

The definition of diversity at The Christ College of Nursing is broad; it includes, but is not limited to, individual differences such as personality, learning styles and life experiences; demographic differences such as age, race, and ethnicity; gender, gender identity, and sexual orientation; socioeconomic status; language; nationality; physical and mental abilities; political viewpoint; and religion (Adapted from Association of American Colleges & Universities, 2009).

Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion at The Christ College

The Christ College of Nursing and Health Sciences promotes the academic and personal growth of all students regardless of variations in thoughts, experiences, values, and traditions. We consider the rich diversity of our students, faculty, and staff to be both a defining characteristic and an essential source of the strength of our college.

Years of research have shown that diversity in a welcoming and respectful environment will encourage critical thinking, help reduce stereotypes, and strengthen the ability to communicate and work across lines of identity and differences. We consider these to be essential skills needed in a globally-connected world. We are committed to providing a diverse learning environment that all students need to grow into leaders and productive citizens in the healthcare industry.

We believe that diversity enhances the learning experience by exposing and challenging us to consider and value the thoughts, experiences, and practices of others different from ourselves. Our Vision, Mission, and Core Values point out that inclusion is part of our purpose, and we embrace that our college can achieve excellence if we are diverse.

Scholarship Opportunities

Opens February 1st Deadline May 1st

The Diversity Equity & Inclusion Scholarship at The Christ College of Nursing & Health Sciences (TCCNHS) promotes commitment to excellence in education and aims to deliver on our goal of ensuring that the College environment is diverse, inclusive, representative of our community, and provides equal opportunity for each student to succeed. The TCCNHS Diversity Equity & Inclusion Scholarship has been established to assist students of diverse cultural backgrounds in pursuing an education and career in the healthcare industry.

Please reach out to your advisor for more information on how to apply.

Follow this link to see a list of local scholarships that may help students pursue their dreams of higher education. You are encouraged to visit the website to confirm the information before applying.

 

Student Engagement

The purpose of the students’ DEI group, Bridging The Gap (BTG), is to further The College’s educational and cultural commitment to preparing students for the delivery of healthcare in a dynamic society. Bridging the Gap strives to promote a college environment that is diverse, inclusive, representative of a community where all are welcome, and provides equal opportunity for each student, faculty, and staff member to succeed. As such, BTG advocates for diverse voices, creates spaces for discussions that foster inclusion and sense of community among all TCC constituents, implements innovative approaches to promote equity on campus, and supports diversity and inclusion efforts in the community. As TCC moves forward, BTG strives to cultivate a culture of inclusivity and equity on campus that ensures a sense of belonging is an attainable reality for all students.

Collaboration with The Christ Hospital Health Network

The Christ College has a partnership with The Christ Hospital’s working nurse professionals to promote the hiring of diverse nursing graduates into The Christ Hospital Health Network. Efforts to promote engagement include shared events, the participation of College employees on Hospital Network committees, and the invitation for participation in Employee Retention Groups extended to all Christ College students.

Leadership Comments

As a community of learners, The Christ College of Nursing and Health Sciences embraces and encourages a culture of diversity for our students, faculty and staff. The opportunity to provide our stakeholders an environment that is open, inviting, and inclusive, is key to a successful institution of higher education in the 21st Century. Our college is constantly evolving to meet the demands of our dynamic society and adapt to the changing nature of health care and higher education. We best accomplish that by assuring that we have diverse opinions represented when we have discussions and create plans to accomplish our goals. A diverse community comprised of people from a wide array of cultures, viewpoints, and backgrounds contribute to the diversity of thought essential to our college’s future and allows us to better support inclusivity within our student body, our faculty, and our staff. The College and the communities we serve are made stronger by a mutual exchange of ideas, so we have an obligation to see that the greatest variety of perspectives is brought to bear on issues before us as scholars and citizens. Diversity at The College is essential to our four core values of Caring, Collaboration, Integrity and Excellence.

President Gail Kist-Kline, PhD, states:

At The Christ College of Nursing and Health Sciences, diversity is essential for the achievement of academic excellence. Diversity in the academic setting embraces race, ethnic background, religion, age, sexual orientation, disabilities, and political views, along with styles of learning, communicating, and thinking. Diversity enhances educational experiences where students and faculty interact with one another through respectful communication to prepare students to participate in a diverse, dynamic healthcare setting.

Diversity Glossary

ALLY - Describes someone who supports a group other than one’s own (in terms of racial identity, gender, faith identity, sexual orientation, etc.). Allies acknowledge disadvantage and oppression of groups other than their own; take risks and supportive action on their behalf; commit to reducing their own complicity or collusion in oppression of those groups and invest in strengthening their own knowledge and awareness of oppression.

CAMPUS CLIMATE - Campus climate refers to how students, faculty, and staff perceive and experience an institution’s environment.

CULTURE - A social system of meaning and custom that is developed by a group of people to assure its adaptation and survival. These groups are distinguished by a set of unspoken rules that shape values, beliefs, habits, patterns of thinking, behaviors and styles of communication.

CULTURAL COMPETENCE - The ability to function effectively in a society of culture variation.

DISCRIMINATION - The unequal treatment of members of various groups based on race, gender, social class, sexual orientation, physical ability, religion and other categories.

DIVERSITY - The wide range of national, ethnic, racial and other backgrounds of U.S. residents and immigrants as social groupings, co-existing in American culture. The term is often used to include aspects of race, ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation, class and much more.

EMPOWERMENT - When target group members refuse to accept the dominant ideology and their subordinate status and take actions to redistribute social power more equitably.

ETHNICITY - A social construct which divides people into smaller social groups based on characteristics such as shared sense of group membership, values, behavioral patterns, language, political and economic interests, history and ancestral geographical base.

GENDER BINARY – The idea that there are only two genders and that every person is one of those two.

GENDER EXPRESSION – The external display of one’s gender, through a combination of dress, demeanor, social behavior, and other factors, generally made sense of on scales of masculinity and femininity. Also referred to as “gender presentation.”

GENDER FLUID - Gender fluid is a gender identity best described as a dynamic mix of boy and girl. A person who is gender fluid may always feel like a mix of the two traditional genders, but may feel more man some days, and more woman other days.

GENDER IDENTITY – The internal perception of one’s gender, and how they label themselves, based on how much they align or don’t align with what they understand their options for gender to be. Common identity labels include man, woman, genderqueer, trans, and more. Often confused with biological sex, or sex assigned at birth.

GENDER NON-CONFORMING – A gender expression descriptor that indicates a non-traditional gender presentation (masculine woman or feminine man) 2 a gender identity label that indicates a person who identifies outside of the gender binary. Often abbreviated as “GNC.”

INCLUSION - Authentically brings traditionally excluded individuals and/or groups into processes, activities, and decision/policy making. “ISMs” - A way of describing any attitude, action or institutional structure that subordinates (oppresses) a person or group because of their target group, color (racism), gender (sexism), economic status (classism), older age (ageism), religion (e.g. Anti-Semitism), sexual orientation (heterosexism), language/immigrant status (xenophobism), etc.

LGBTQ – Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender and Queer and/or Questioning (sometimes people a + at the end in an effort to be more inclusive);

MINORITY - A culturally, ethnically, racially, or religious group that coexists and have a distinctive presence within a society.

OPPRESSION - The systemic and pervasive nature of social inequality woven throughout social institutions as well as embedded within individual consciousness. Oppression fuses institutional and systemic discrimination, personal bias, bigotry, and social prejudice in a complex web of relationships and structures that saturate most aspects of life in our society. Oppression denotes structural and material constraints that significantly shape a person’s life chances and sense of possibility.

Oppression also signifies a hierarchical relationship in which dominant or privilege groups benefit, often in unconscious ways, from the disempowerment of subordinated or targeted groups. Oppression resides not only in external social institutions and norms but also within the human psyche as well.

Eradicating oppression ultimately requires struggle against all its forms, and that building coalitions among diverse people offers the most promising strategies for challenging oppression systematically.

PERSON OF COLOR - A term used to describe all people who are not white. The term is meant to be inclusive among non-white groups, emphasizing common experiences of racism. People of color was introduced as a preferable replacement to both non-white and minority, which are also inclusive, because it frames the subject positively; non-white defines people in terms of what they are not (white), and minority frequently carries a subordinate connotation.

PRIVILEGE - A right that only some people have access or availability to because of their social group memberships (dominants). Because hierarchies of privilege exist, even within the same group, people who are part of the group in power (white/Caucasian people with respect to people of color, men with respect to women, heterosexuals with respect to homosexuals, adults with respect to children, and rich people with respect to poor people) often deny they have privilege even when evidence of differential benefit is obvious.

RACE - A social construct that artificially divides people into distinct groups based on characteristics such as physical appearance (particularly color), ancestral heritage, cultural affiliation, cultural history, ethnic classification, and the social, economic, and political needs of a society at a given period of time. Racial categories subsume ethnic groups.

RACIAL AND ETHNIC IDENTITY - An individual’s awareness and experience of being a member of a racial and ethnic group; the racial and ethnic categories that an individual chooses to describe him or herself based on such factors as biological heritage, physical appearance, cultural affiliation, early socialization, and personal experience.

RACIAL EQUITY - The condition that would be achieved if one’s racial identity no longer predicted, in a statistical sense, how one fares. When we use the term, we are thinking about racial equity as one part of racial justice, and thus we also include work to address root causes of inequities not just their manifestations. This includes elimination of policies, practices, attitudes and cultural messages that reinforce differential outcomes by race or fail to eliminate them.

RACISM - A complex system of beliefs and behaviors, grounded in a presumed superiority of the white race. These beliefs and behaviors are conscious and unconscious; personal and institutional, and result in the oppression of people of color and benefit the dominant group, whites. A simpler definition is racial prejudice + power = racism.

RIGHT - A resource or position that everyone has equal access or availability to regardless of their social group memberships.

SOCIAL JUSTICE - A vision of society in which the distribution of resources is equitable and all members are physically and psychologically safe and secure. Social justice involves social actors who have a sense of their own agency as well as a sense of social responsibility toward and with others and the society as a whole.

UNDERREPRESENTED - Racial and ethnic populations are underrepresented relative to their numbers in the general population. Data suggests that these student populations include but are not limited to Black/African American, Chicano/Mexican American/Latino, and Native American/Alaska Native students. Five- year trend rates for students from underrepresented groups will be a measure of historical under-representation.