Chancellor Dynes created a Commission on Diversity in 1997
to engage in wide-ranging discussions focused on improving UCSD’s diversity efforts.
The Commission reported its recommendations to the Chancellor in February of 1998.
Subsequently, the Chancellor broadly sought campus comment on the report. The Chancellor
and Vice Chancellors also intensely considered the report’s recommendations and their
implementation and developed additional strategies to increase and nurture diversity.
Based upon this comprehensive approach, Chancellor Dynes has created, and is
immediately implementing, the following 10-Point Action Plan.
- To underscore his and the campus’ commitment to diversity, and to insure that
diversity efforts are pursued as a major institutional priority, the Chancellor
wholeheartedly accepts the Commission’s recommendation to designate himself as the
Chief Diversity Officer of UCSD.
- To strengthen the impact and cohesiveness of UCSD’s diversity efforts, the Chancellor
is establishing a UCSD Diversity Council, comprised of faculty, staff and students.
This will not be an administration Council; the members will represent the full UCSD
community. The Council will replace the Chancellor’s Affirmative Action Advisory Committee
and the Diversity Education Leadership Team. Building on the achievements of those
committees, the Council will oversee a broad agenda of proactive diversity activities.
These include further assessing the effectiveness of UCSD’s diversity efforts and
programs, bringing diversity issues and opportunities to the Chancellor’s attention,
and recommending policy changes that will positively impact diversity at UCSD.
- To increase student diversity, the campus is setting a goal of tripling UCSD’s
current scholarship base to annually awarding $1million in undergraduate scholarships,
by the year 2002. In addition, the Dean of Graduate Studies and the Vice Chancellor,
Development and University Relations will seek increased private funding for graduate
fellowships.
- To increase the diversity of the undergraduate student body, the campus has
established a goal of annually increasing UCSD’s new underrepresented student population
by 10%. The Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs, and his staff, have pledged their
commitment to achieving this goal. Further, the Vice Chancellor, Development and
University Relations pledges to assist academic departments and programs in obtaining
external support for joint student/faculty outreach efforts to attract new students,
and for academic enrichment programs for current students.
- As a further step toward increasing undergraduate diversity, high achievers from
all high schools in San Diego and Imperial counties should be identified and recruited
to UCSD. Toward this goal, the Chancellor and the Vice Chancellor, Student Affairs are
committed to working with the Admissions Committee on a plan to offer admission to the
top 4% of UC-eligible graduates from each high school in these two counties. In addition,
the Chancellor and Vice Chancellor, Student Affairs initiated this year the Community
Scholarship Program, in which the campus partners with high school principals to award
scholarships to UCSD-eligible students who demonstrate a commitment to their
community.
- Setting increased faculty diversity as an institutional priority, the Chancellor
pledges resources to efforts that produce results. Toward this goal, the Senior Vice
Chancellor, Academic Affairs will benchmark and recommend to the Chancellor the nation’s
"best practices" in faculty recruitment and retention. Also toward this end, a
Distinguished Visitors Program and the "Profiles in Diversity" project
recommended by the Commission will be implemented.
- To address staff diversity issues, the Vice Chancellor, Business Affairs will
institute, this year, performance requirements for administrators’, managers’, and
other employees’ adherence to the UCSD Principles of Community and support for diversity.
Campus-wide funding for training and professional development will be increased, and
greater staff access to training will be promoted. Further, a number of staff recruitment
and retention efforts, and other initiatives aimed at increasing staff diversity, will
be pursued on an ambitious timetable.
- Initiatives that improve the campus climate will be nurtured. The Cross-Cultural
Center and the Women’s Center are examples of programs that have accomplished this goal.
As the Commission recommends, resources for these Centers will be increased. Space for
UCSD’s lesbian, gay, bisexual and trans- gender communities will be one of the first
issues the Diversity Council considers.
- To insure that they receive the broadest input possible, the Diversity Council will
talk with campus constituencies regarding the development and implementation of diversity
initiatives. On the Chancellor’s behalf and through a variety of methods -- including a
twice-yearly Diversity Forum -- the Council will facilitate an exchange of views on
diversity issues, challenges, and strategies. The Council will bring these matters to
the Chancellor for review and action.
- The Chancellor will implement the CREATE program, a UCSD-designed, comprehensive
initiative to increase the number of underrepresented students who achieve UC-eligibility,
enroll at UCSD and other UC caliber universities, and fulfill their potential as college
students and graduates. This broad K-12 outreach effort includes the creation of a Model
School, partnerships with school clusters, teacher development, outreach and recruitment,
research, and an assessment of K-12 educational practices.
Each Vice Chancellor also has created detailed responses to specific recommendations
in the Diversity Commission’s report. That comprehensive response is titled the
Chancellor’s Diversity Plan and will be available at: