Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion

The Sierra Camp Community celebrates the diversity of identity, background, skills, experiences, and values that each of our community members (both Staphers and guests alike) bring! We are committed to create spaces for all of our community members to feel celebrated, loved, and cared for.

 

Sierra Camp Community Contract

 

We expect all who choose to be a part of the Sierra Camp community to stand for diversity, equity, and inclusion. We ask our community to contribute to Camp’s efforts in supporting its progress in this arena, by individually taking responsibility for one’s own behavior and development, as well as, in both action and rhetoric, cultivating and maintaining a healthy, safe environment in which all community members can thrive and are able to live without fear of racism, discrimination, harassment, and violence.

We hope all members of our community will actively practice:
Kindness. Curiosity. Care. Humility. A Willing Attitude.


We ask members of our community to continue to self-educate, engage, speak up, make space, get curious, call in, take risks, acknowledge mistakes and keep learning, practice gratitude and humility, question the status quo, and work to elevate the voice and visions of Black, Indigenous, and People of Color.

Black Lives Matter

Sierra Camp Black Lives Matter Week of Action Resources

Welcome to resources from our Sierra Camp Black Lives Matter Week of Action. First, an introduction — The Sierra Camp Week of Action was born from the passion and commitment of a group of current and former staph with a vision to engage in mutual education, community building, and fundraising directed towards the Black Lives Matter movement. In our staphers’ words, “Sierra Camp time and time again shows how people can come together to do hard work as a community.” We are honored to be trusted with helping direct this energy towards such a needed and pivotal movement. We recognize that this week of action is a small step in a lifelong journey of learning and unlearning. We hope all who love Camp will continue to help supporting its progress in this arena, and will continue to self-educate, engage, speak up, make space, get curious, call in, take risks, acknowledge mistakes and keep learning, practice gratitude and humility, question the status quo, and work to elevate the voice and visions of Black, Indigenous, and People of Color.

The Week in Preview (WIP) is your glimpse at an overview of the week’s activities.  From Saturday Intros to Friday night Talent Show, the Week in Preview allows you an overview of what the week’s programming entails. The Whatzappening (Whatz) is a newsletter that offers more detailed information on each program, including directions to any materials and resources related to a session.  Activities vary with the experience and passions of our volunteer staph facilitators, and all programs are designed to elevate the voices and work of BIPOC leaders (Black, Indigenous and People of Color), encourage reflection, and invite meaningful conversation. The below Whatz includes follow-up resources for each session.

Summer 2020’s Week of Action WIP & Whatz are attached here:

WIP Week of Action 2020

Whatz with Follow-Up Resources Week of Action 2020

BioSketches for our volunteer Summer Staph Facilitators can be read here:
Staph BioSketches

Want to learn more about race at Sierra Camp?
Check out the Frequently Asked Questions

You’re welcome to direct additional questions to ssc.weekofaction@gmail.com

We’re excited to continue building the momentum of our collective community engagement beyond this one week. Feel free to share these resources and programming materials with your communities and anyone who may be interested in receiving the Week of Action material. We just ask that if they are not familiar with the Camp family to please host your guest(s) in a responsible way, meaning introduce them to our Week of Action norms and family camp expectations.

 

FAQ About DEI Work @ Camp

  • Stanford Sierra Camp is a family camp for Stanford alumni and their families, staffed by current Stanford students. Our community is made up of individuals from a variety of backgrounds, races, ethnicities, sexual orientations, majors, careers, interests, areas of the world, gender identities, socio-economic statuses, and life experiences.

  • As a summer camp...

    The idea and original structure of summer camp is inherently rooted in privilege and white culture.

    In order to be a guest, one needs the money, the cultural and economic capital, the cultural capital to know about camps, the privilege to take time out of work to attend camp, the privilege to feel comfortable around a space that is predominantly white families.

    In order to work at a camp, one needs to have the economic and cultural assurance that either life pursuits do not necessarily need to depend on time spent working at a camp rather than other professional opportunities, or that the time spent working at a camp will pay off. For the latter, the individual will need to ask themselves out of necessity: Will this work lead to opportunities? Will this work pay enough? Will this work further one’s career? More often than not, the latter questions are asked by students who are low-income, representative of marginalized communities, first or second generation students, and/or people of color.

    Our current guest population…

    Our current guest population is composed of predominantly white families because our current guest population reflects Stanford alumni of 30 years ago. Stanford of 30 years ago lacked the diversity represented in today’s Stanford student body.

    What can we do? Our guests and leaders can put in time and work to educate themselves on how to support and contribute to our efforts to cultivate a vibrant, diverse community by seeking to surround themselves with educational materials that elevate a wide range of opinions, cultures, perspectives, i.e. literature, podcasts, media, etc.

    Our guests can expose their children to children’s books and other educational material on diverse topics, written by a variety of authors from different cultures, races, perspectives, experiences.

    Our guests can help elevate our Stanford student community by offering mentorship, seeking to promote professional connections, actively seeking to engage and include new families, and genuinely getting to know our staph and fellow guests.

    Our guests can familiarize themselves with staph Biosketches and use this resource in an effort to be less likely to mix up staphers.

    Our guests can submit guest Biosketches to introduce themselves, invite connections, and promote an accessible community.

    I have some ideas… Awesome! Feel encouraged to share your thoughts and ideas with us. You can reach out to us at Camp by calling (530) 541-1244.

  • “Diversity is being invited to the dance, inclusion is being asked to dance, belonging is choosing what kind of dance, equity is having a turn at picking the DJ.” via Dereca Blackmon, Former Exec Director, Inclusion & Diversity Education at Stanford

  • An acronym that stands for “Black, Indigenous, and People of Color.” While “people of color” has existed for quite some time, this new acronym aims to center the unique experiences of Black and Indigenous peoples. Explained in this New York Times article, “The other two letters, for Black and Indigenous, were included in the acronym to account for the erasure of Black people with darker skin and Native American people, according to Cynthia Frisby, a professor of strategic communication at the Missouri School of Journalism. ‘The Black and Indigenous was added to kind of make sure that it was inclusive,’ Ms. Frisby said. ‘I think the major purpose of that was for including voices that hadn’t originally been heard that they wanted to include in the narrative, darker skin, Blacks and Indigenous groups, so that they could make sure that all the skin shades are being represented.’

  • Formally, “brief and commonplace daily verbal, behavioural, or environmental indignities, whether intentional or unintentional, that communicate hostile, derogatory, or negative prejudicial slights and insults toward any group” - Chester M. Pierce, MD. Otherwise explained as, "brief, everyday exchanges that send denigrating messages to certain individuals because of their group membership" - Derald Wing Sue, PhD

    “Microaggressions are often subtle, everyday exchanges that convey bias toward people based on race, gender identity, religion, age, ability, class, or membership to another group.” - Kevin Nadal

    In an article for NPR, Kevin Nadal, explains that, “microaggressions are defined as the everyday, subtle, intentional — and oftentimes unintentional — interactions or behaviors that communicate some sort of bias toward historically marginalized groups. The difference between microaggressions and overt discrimination or macroaggressions, is that people who commit microagressions might not even be aware of them. Someone commenting on how well an Asian American speaks English, which presumes the Asian American was not born here, is one example of a microaggression. Presuming that a black person is dangerous or violent is another example. A common experience that black men talk about is being followed around in stores or getting on an elevator and having people move away and grab their purses or their wallets. Oftentimes, people don't even realize that they're doing those sorts of things. And in fact, if you were to stop them and say, 'Why did you just move?' They would deny it because they don't recognize that their behaviors communicate their racial biases.” Nadal adds that “research over the past 10 years has demonstrated microaggressions are related to a lot of different health and physical outcomes, including depression and anxiety, trauma, physical health issues, sleep issues, alcohol use, and body image issues.”

    Microaggressions Matter by Simba Runyowa

    Did you really just say that? Advice on confronting microaggressions

  • • One stapher/guest of color being mistaken for another stapher/guest of color.

    • Assuming two staphers/guests of color are related.

    • Assuming a stapher/guest of color is not from America.

    • Assuming a stapher/guest of color is low-income.

    • Assuming to know the class or socioeconomic status of an individual based on race.

    • Assuming an International stapher/guest of color cannot speak English.

    • Assuming to know the class or socioeconomic status of an International stapher/guest.

    • Asking to touch a Black stapher’s or guest’s hair.

    • Asking “where are you really from?”

    • Saying that Native Americans do not exist; that Native Americans are extinct.

    Microaggressions may be unintentional, driven by unconscious biases formed by social exposure or lack thereof, etc. with no malicious or willing intent to harm, but the impact can cause an individual to feel ‘other,’ less than, to not belong, and ultimately hurt someone and hurt their experience. One microaggression may be easy to brush off, but if we think of a microaggression as a pebble, each pebble, no matter how small, will weigh on an individual. Especially for our staphers of color, who are charged with meeting many new people each day of each week, for 12 weeks, microaggressions build and build with little avenue for release.

  • Take the time to reflect on and confront your own hesitancies, attitudes, stereotypes and expectations prior to entering the Camp space.

    Engage in self-education rather than asking your fellow guests/staff of color to speak for the experience of an entire group of people.

    Have open conversations with your family about discrimination and privilege, social justice, systems of oppression, and biases, no matter your background. This helps teach children early to celebrate and accept diversity, but at the same time make them aware that racism, sexism, ableism, and classism exists.

    Coach children to express their curiosity in different ways and in appropriate contexts, i.e. instead of asking someone if you can touch their hair, tell them they have beautiful hair. People have many differences and they are beautiful.

    Be a positive role model, in both action and rhetoric. We all make mistakes; acknowledging one’s own biases instead of pushing them away and encouraging correction, curiosity, and growth can promote self-awareness and personal growth.

    Consider potential impact before you speak. Take care with your own rhetoric, while assuming best intent and extending generous assumptions of others’.

    Microaggressions can have long-lasting effects. Here’s how to prevent them.

  • In a CBS News article, Professor Celeste Watkins-Hayes, an African American studies professor at Northwestern University, explains “‘part of what was stolen, when we think about slavery, when we think about colonization, was that lineage. [They are saying] 'I don't even feel comfortable claiming African, because I don't know the story of where my people have come from.’ ‘Black’ is often a better default that recognizes and celebrates the race, culture, and lived experiences of people all over the world. ‘The move that you see now towards black is really to recognize the global nature of blackness,’ Watkins-Hayes said. ‘So, I think that that is the more universal term.’ The recognition of a larger community of black people is also part of the rationale given for capitalizing the word. ‘It's recognizing the cultural and historical and social significance of black as a category, such that it deserves capitalization,’ Watkins-Hayes explained. But Watkins-Hayes adds that if someone wants to know for sure how a black person identifies, it's best to simply ask what their preference is. ‘It's an opportunity for conversation.’”

    In the same article, Darien LaBeach, the director of diversity, equity, and inclusion strategy at the digital marketing agency Huge Inc., speaks on his experience being born in Jamaica and raised in the United States. “‘I am black, and within that, I am a Jamaican-born African American man, but I call myself and identify as black,’ he explained.’I have had to take on different identities at different periods of my life. But my blackness is the overarching umbrella of those different flavors of my identity.’ LaBeach's experience is just one example of the complexities of black identities, especially in the United States. Some people originally from other countries who live in the U.S. accept African American because of its cultural and historical roots in the black experience that is specific to this country. ‘African American technically isn't even what I am,’ he said. ‘I'm a Jamaican-born black person but I have taken on this label of African American because of where I live.’ These layers of racial identity can be extremely personal and nuanced. There are some Americans who identify as both, and some who prefer black over African American because they can't actually trace their lineage.

  • From the Blackburn Center, “gender pronouns are the words that an individual would like others to use when talking about them or to them. Everyone has pronouns. “He, him, his” and “she, her, hers” are most commonly used in our culture. However, people who are transgender or who do not conform to the male or female gender categories may choose to use pronouns that fall outside of those gender categorizations — like “they, them, theirs.” You can’t always tell what gender pronouns are appropriate just by looking at someone — and you should never assume a person’s pronouns by their appearance. If you haven’t ever had to worry about your pronouns, this issue may seem unimportant. This is an advantage for you: having a single and visible gender identity, and not having to think about how people will refer to you. For others, the use of gender pronouns is critical. If someone uses the wrong pronouns for them, they may feel invalidated and disrespected. People who fall outside of the commonly used gender categories have the burden of telling others what their pronouns are. This can be alienating, marking that person as different or ‘other.’

    A simple solution to this issue is to make gender pronouns part of regular conversation. This can be as easy as adding your pronouns to your email signature, or sharing your pronouns when you introduce yourself to someone. By doing that, you normalize the process. For cisgender people — those whose gender identity matches the sex that they were assigned at birth — there is little risk in taking this step. Learning to share our pronouns is a vital aspect of building a more inclusive society. Transgender individuals and those who do not conform to the male or female gender categories often struggle when deciding to tell others their pronouns — or asking people to use them. When cisgender people take the lead in sharing their pronouns, it reduces the stigma associated with talking about gender pronouns. It also signals to others that you are an ally. Putting this into practice is easy. You can start by changing your email signature line to note your gender pronouns, and then do the same for your LinkedIn and social media profiles. Next, offer your pronouns to others when you first meet them. This can be as simple as saying, ‘Hi, I’m Mary — I use the pronouns she/her/hers.’ If you are introduced to someone and don’t know their gender pronouns, ask! ‘What are your pronouns’ is a direct way to make sure that you do not mis-gender anyone.”

Vocabulary List

 

Ally - a person who takes action against oppression out of a belief that eliminating oppression will benefit members of targeted groups and advantage groups. Allies acknowledge disadvantage and oppression of other groups than their own, take supportive action on their behalf, commit to reducing their own complicity or collusion in oppression of these groups, and invest in strengthening their own knowledge and awareness of oppression. (Center for Assessment and Policy Development)

Cultural Competence - 1) Knowledge, awareness and interpersonal skills that allow individuals to increase their understanding, sensitivity, appreciation, and responsiveness to cultural differences and the interactions resulting from them. The particulars of acquiring cultural competency vary among different groups, and they involve ongoing relational process tending to inclusion and trust-building. (UC Berkeley Initiative for Equity, Inclusion, and Diversity) 2) A process of learning that leads to the ability to effectively respond to the challenges and opportunities posed by the presence of social cultural diversity in a defined social system. (The National Multicultural Institute)

Ethnicity - a social construct which divides people into smaller social groups based on characteristics such as values, behavioral patterns, language, political and economic interests, history, and ancestral geographical base. (Adams, Bell and Griffin)

Equity - the guarantee of fair treatment, access, opportunity, and advancement while at the same time striving to identify and eliminate barriers that have prevented the full participation of some groups. The principle of equity acknowledges that there are historically underserved and underrepresented populations and that fairness regarding these unbalanced conditions is needed to assist equality in the provision of effective opportunities to all groups. (UC Berkeley Initiative for Equity, Inclusion, and Diversity).

Inclusion - the act of creating environments in which any individual or group can be and feel welcomed, respected, supported, and valued to fully participate. An inclusive and welcoming climate embraces differences and offers respect in words and actions for all people. (UC Berkeley Initiative for Equity, Inclusion, and Diversity)

Institutional Racism- Also known as systemic racism, this is forms of racism that are ingrained in our society, politics and organizations. It is typically less obvious that overt racism and is when entire racial groups are discriminated against by a larger entity than an individual person. Example: Standardized test questions have been proven to favor white students however we still use them as a measure of merit in our school systems. 

Intersectionality - The understanding that social issues cannot be explored in isolation as different identities such as race, gender, age etc. intersect in each person’s life and produce different privilege or oppression. Coined by Kimberlé Crenshaw in 1989. 

Intent vs. Impact - this distinction is an integral part of inclusive environments; intent is what a person meant to do and impact is the effect it had on someone else.  Regardless of intent, it is imperative to recognize how behaviors, language, actions, etc. affect or influence other people. An examination of what was said or done and how it was received is the focus, not necessarily what was intended. (Workforce Diversity Network)

Privilege - An advantage that comes from historical oppression of other groups. Privilege can be seen in race, gender, sexuality, ability, socioeconomic status, age etc. Acknowledging it isn’t meant to shame those with certain privilege but rather challenge the systems that make it exist. It does not mean that you with a certain privilege have never had challenges in life, just that there are some challenges you will not experience because of your identity. Examples: A hearing abled individual can watch TV and know what is happening because they can hear the sound. A heterosexual couple can walk together in public more comfortably than a homosexual couple. A white person can buy a bandage in their skin color where a black person’s flesh color bandage doesn’t match their skin.

White Fragility - See: The book by Robin DiAngelo (would recommend Chapter 5: The Good/Bad Binary

Whitesplaining - When a white person explains why something is offensive to a person of color. It is interpreted as giving people of color permission for how they feel when something offensive happens and is condescending to people of color who do not need to be told about their own experience. White people cannot decide what is and what is not racism and do not know what it is like to be a person of color. The same concept can apply for mansplaining when a man speaks on behalf of a woman’s experience. We can empathize without speaking for others.