Harvard President Stresses Need For Staff Diversity
While strides have been made to increase faculty and staff
diversity, University President Drew G. Faust wrote in a campus-wide
e-mail, women and minorities remain underrepresented in many campus
circles. The latest development in the effort to diversify focuses on
the university’s non-faculty workforce, an endeavor lead by newly
appointed Chief Diversity Officer Lisa M. Coleman.
Coleman joined
the administration in Mass. Hall two weeks ago as Chief Diversity
Officer, and will now be responsible for taking the lead in ensuring
staff diversity.
According to Faust’s community e-mail, 60
percent of Harvard staff are women and 22 percent are people of color,
but only 12 percent of those have attained leadership positions.
Coleman
said in an interview with The Crimson yesterday that efforts to improve
diversity on campus center not only around quantitative factors, like
more minority hires, but also on qualitative aspects, like the
community’s attitude towards minority staffers.
“This is an era
when the notion of diversity is changing,” Coleman said. “This is an
opportunity for Harvard to talk about what it means to have a diverse
campus.”
Yesterday’s
e-mail continues a long-standing effort by Faust to improve diversity
on campus. Faust ascended to the Presidency in 2007 under the shadow of
former University President Larry Summers’ comments alleging that the
relatively low number of tenured women in science and math departments
might be explained by women having a lower aptitude for those subjects
than men.
During Faust’s time as President, women have made gains
among the faculty and administrative staff, attaining more senior level
positions at the University. Faust noted that she was the only female
dean in 2001; now there are five.
Still, efforts to open
employment opportunities to women on campus have proceeded slowly,
according to the 2009 Faculty Development and Diversity Report.
Harvard’s proportion of women junior professors, for example, lags
behind peer institutions in many fields, the report states.
Senior
Vice Provost for Faculty Development and Diversity Judith D. Singer,
whose office prepared the report, said that comparisons to peer
institutions were difficult to gauge and that the strides Harvard has
made are more pertinent to the University.
“The statistics
document what you could say was amazing success,” Singer said
yesterday. “Forty-six percent of junior faculty in the social sciences
at Harvard are women—that’s amazing.”
Still, Singer admitted that
there was progress to be made to increase the number of
“underrepresented minorities”—a category defined by Faust’s letter as
African-Americans, Latinos, and Native Americans—on Harvard’s faculty.
Those minorities make up only about 6 percent of the University’s
ladder faculty, according to the e-mail.
The Harvard Crimson
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