WEDNESDAY FEDRUARY 22, 2D17 EXAMINING ELON’S SOCIAL CLIMATE: A THREE PM™ OiEGO PINEDA I Fliofo Editor DIEGO PINEDA I Photo Editor DIEGO PINEDA I PtwtoEiar PEOPLE ARE SURPRISED WHEN I DO CERTAIN THINGS THAT AREN’T TYPICAL OF SOMEONE THAT LOOKS LIKE ME, TRES MCMICHAEL SOPHOMORE I JUST HAVEN’T HAD A MOMENT WHERE LIKE, 'WOW, I’M HERE AND I FEEL LIKE THIS IS FOR ME,’I FEEL LIKE I’VE HAD SMALL OUTBURSTS, BUT NOT LIKE AN EPIPHANY, KENNETH BROWN SOPHOMORE I’VE HAD A GREAT OVERALL ELON EXPERIENCE,,, I’VE LEARNED SO MUCH, BUT ITHINKTHERE’SALOT OF THINGS THAT WE ARE WORKING ON AS WELL, RACHEL HOBBS INCLUSIVITY from cover McMichael views this challenge as an opportunity to offer something new to each group. “Sometimes me being in a theater production or me being in the per forming arts or me being in a frater nity can spark up a different idea or a different conversation in another space that wouldn’t have existed had someone not been a part of either one of those groups,” he said. Tony Crider, associate professor of physics, is working to find out how Elon can improve its social cli mate so more students can have di verse experiences like McMichael. Though he is pleased with stu dents’ levels of engagement and in volvement on campus, Crider is con cerned some are closing themselves off from new experiences. “We like to be part of small groups where you have something in common with the people there,” Crider said. “But that means that you’ve maybe shut people out from that group. “Inclusivity is the opposite of that where you allow everyone in, but then you might not have that thing in common where you can make that a meaningful group in the first place.” Examining inclusivity Crider is co-chairing a 10-mem ber team implementing a compre hensive social climate task force re port released in April 2016. The report provides 42 recom mendations on a host of topics rang ing from improving students’ college transitions to reviewing and revising university policies. Conclusions were drawn based on data from a combi nation of group interviews, campus surveys, town hall forums, campus ecology experiences and idea walls. Though a substantial portion of data was not available in the report itself, much information was provid ed through the release of executive summaries in the student and facul ty/staff surveys. “We were certainly fairly trans parent in putting that data out there and letting people know where this came from,” said Jon Dooley, assis tant vice president for student life and co-chair of the Presidential Task Force on Social Climate and Out-of- Class Engagement. Themes of inclusivity and be longing consistently emerged in the report. Of the nearly 900 student re spondents, 17 percent disagreed or strongly disagreed that they be longed at Elon and 23 percent dis agreed or strongly disagreed that the social climate was very welcoming to them. More than a third of respon dents said they were dissatisfied or very dissatisfied with campus cli mate related to diversity. The results are not necessarily reflective of the entire student pop ulation because they were gathered through a convenience sample — all undergraduate students were invited by email to take a voluntary survey. Still, it is clear many students believe Elon lacks diversity and is not inclu sive to all. Lack of belonging and unity the real issue Diversity is about much more than demographic trends and stu dent backgrounds. It is also about the shared experiences of the com munity as a whole. This is the true 4 PERCENT OF STUDENTS DID NOT CONSIDER THEMSELVES TO BE AN ACTIVE GROUP MEMBER-MEANING THEY DID NOT PARTICIPATE IN AN ORGANIZATION AT LEAST ONCE A MONTH, root of the problem Elon is facing. How can more students come together? How can siloed groups be come unified? How do you encour age students such as McMichael, who want to break out of the boxes people have tried to confine them into? These are the questions the university is asking, and the ques tions are largely unanswered. Sophomore Kenneth Brown benefited from Elon’s commitment to promoting diversity and is very much appreciative of the opportu nities he has earned, yet one interac tion reveals much about his experi ence. Asked if he feels he belongs, a lengthy pause ensues. “Do I belong here?” he said, look ing up at the ceiling in search of an answer. “Do I belong here?” he said, still unsure of how to respond. “I don’t know just yet,” he said. “I just haven’t had a moment where like, ‘Wow, I’m here and I feel like this is for me.’ I feel like I’ve had small outbursts, but not like an epiphany where like, ‘Wow, I’m here and I can fit in here,”’ Brown said. Brown is an involved student on campus. He can often be seen watch ing Elon athletic events or hanging out at the Center for Race, Ethnicity and Diversity Education (CREDE). He also serves as sophomore class president in the SGA and is involved in Black Student Union. When he is not participating in activities or walking to and from events, he can typically be seen talking with his fel low students. You’ve just got to be nice to peo ple,” he said. “Whether it’s saying hi or saying a kind word, for me, that’s what my parents taught me growing up. Treat others the way you want to be treated, smile, say please and thank you and be nice. You know, all you’ve got to do is say hi to people.” Brown being unsure about whether he belongs at Elon could come as a surprise to people and re flect the magnitude of the problem the university is facing in fostering an inclusive climate. “Inclusivity, to me, is the ability to be able to have tough conversations, talk to people who are different than you, but at the end of the day, you still have their back because you’re a Phoenix, I’m a Phoenix, we all are Phoenix,” Brown said. Elon students are mostly white, female or come from North Caroli na or northeastern states. Elon has heightened its efforts in the past sev eral years to recruit people of more diverse backgrounds. Brooke Barnett, associate provost for inclusive community, is in her 16th year at Elon and said she has seen the university’s representation al diversity increase within that pen- od of time in terms of the number of non-Christian students, students of color and first-generation students. Earlier this academic year, Greg Zaiser, vice president of enrollment, called the Class of 2020 the “largest and most diverse in Elon history. Even so, the university reports an ethnic diversity of 18 percent. Six percent of students are black and 5 percent are Hispanic, according to The College Board. Brown represents Elon’s relative ly small black population. A highly involved and motivated student in high school, he was named an Od yssey Scholar and given a scholar ship, in part, because of his ability to overcome adversity growing up m ^ household with a low socioeconom ic status. “Elon has taken major steps to ensure that not only students who are minorities on this campus feel