Around 130 抖阴旅行射 Boulder leaders from the Academic Affairs, Advancement, and Strategic Resources and Support divisions came together in a May 13 workshop to learn the art of cultivating inclusive leadership.
Convened by the Office of Faculty Relations in partnership with Human Resources and Organizational and Employee Development, and jointly sponsored by Provost Russell Moore and Senior Vice Chancellor Kelly Fox, the workshop was led by Brenda J. Allen, former vice chancellor for diversity and inclusion at the 抖阴旅行射 Denver/Anschutz Medical Campus and former 抖阴旅行射 Boulder assistant professor of communication.
鈥淟eadership is a process of social influence which maximizes the efforts of others toward the achievement of a greater goal,鈥 Allen said in the workshop鈥檚 opening segment. 听
The workshop then began a focus on inclusive leadership as a permanent resource that Allen said 鈥渘eeds to be cultivated.鈥
She laid out a pathway for that cultivation built on what she termed 鈥渢he six signature traits of inclusive leadership: commitment, courage, cognizance of bias, curiosity, cultural intelligence and collaboration.鈥
The end result of applying the six traits, she said, is that all individuals and communities can say 鈥淚 feel 颈苍肠濒耻诲别诲.鈥
The workshop had participants break out in role-playing cohorts to examine the six traits of inclusive leadership, focusing on the 鈥渨hy鈥 of cultivating inclusive leadership, applying the six traits to leadership practices and then developing individual action plans for themselves as inclusive leaders.
鈥淭he event provided an opportunity for campus leaders to have a collective conversation about the critical role of leadership in creating the inclusive campus community we strive for,鈥 said Merna Jacobsen, assistant vice chancellor and deputy chief HR officer and director of Organizational and Employee Development.
Provost Russ Moore and Senior Vice Chancellor Kelly Fox sounded out similar themes.
鈥淭his was a great moment of progress for the campus today,鈥 said Moore. 鈥淲ith Dr. Allen鈥檚 inspiration, a key group of campus leaders made a personal commitment to inclusive leadership and sketched out a roadmap to take that work forward into their respective units and organizations.鈥
Fox said, 鈥淏uilding a culture in which our leadership models and builds capacity for inclusivity is a requirement and an important measure of our success as a campus. I am looking forward to continuing this work in the fall with the passion, commitment and imagination I saw today.鈥