By Jeff Murphy,
June 29, 2022
University of Central Missouri President Roger Best, right, participated in the Council
for Advancement and Support of Education (CASE) Region VI panel discussion on "Diversity,
Equity, Inclusion and Belonging in Advancement Work" with UCM alumna Jessica Ramirez,
left, '99, vice president of advancement at Cleveland University-Kansas City, and
Dr. Susan B. Wilson, retired vice chancellor for diversity and inclusion at the University
of Missouri-Kansas City.
WARRENSBURG, MO – In an effort to further understanding of the value of making individuals
feel welcome, valued and included in higher education, University of Central Missouri
President Roger Best recently participated in a panel discussion on “Diversity, Equity,
Inclusion and Belonging in Advancement Work.” The panel, which also featured Dr.
Susan B. Wilson, retired vice chancellor for diversity and inclusion at the University
of Missouri-Kansas City, and UCM alumna Jessica Ramirez, ’99, vice president of advancement
at Cleveland University-Kansas City, took place on June 23 at UMKC. It was made possible
by the Council for the Advancement and Support of Education (CASE) District VI with
assistance by a UCM staff member.
In addition to Best’s role as a speaker, UCM provided support for the event through
Jackie Jackson, associate vice president for university advancement. The longtime
CASE volunteer worked alongside fellow conference planning committee members to select
the panel topic as well as develop topics for roundtables that took place on the same
day. The event was attended by 30 CASE professionals from within the district’s eight-state
region, Colorado, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, and
Wyoming.
Jackson spoke about how the event came to fruition, noting, “CASE hosted the all-district
online conference this year in lieu of hosting a regional in-person conference. However,
the conference planning committee still wanted to offer a networking and learning
opportunity for members of our district.”
Since District VI covers such a large area throughout the Midwest, three different
networking and roundtable events were planned. Sessions on “Diversity, Equity, Inclusion
and Belonging in Advancement Work” took place at UMKC, University of Denver and Kirkwood
Community College.
“The conference planning committee examined attendee feedback from the online conference
to determine what the panel topic and roundtable topics would be. I developed panelist
questions, Advancement DEIB-related scenarios to walk through, and discussion prompts
for the roundtable discussions,” Jackson said. ”My primary responsibilities were logistical
in nature: finding and securing host sites, on-site volunteers, and panelists.”
Having attended the Kansas City event in person, Jackson said her key takeaways included
understanding how the main topic relates to the work Advancement professionals do,
and the need for having DEIB-related discussions with alumni and donors. Based on
discussions, she learned more about the importance of Advancement personnel “ being
inclusive about inviting a variety of people to the table when discussing DEIB initiatives,
the benefit of listening more than you talk when alumni are sharing their experiences,
and inviting alumni and donors to be part of university-wide DEIB conversations and
initiatives.”
During the panel discussion, Best had an opportunity to briefly discuss the role of
UCM’s President’s Commission on Diversity, Equity and Inclusion. This is a group that
was appointed by Best and represents a wide cross-section of campus members who are
charged with helping to ensure many different voices are heard as recommendations
are made to enhance the UCM community experience for students, employees, and campus
visitors.
The panel fielded questions about the challenges they face in implementing DEIB initiatives,
the need to recruit diverse individuals to serve on institutional boards that deal
with Advancement issues, advice for getting started with DEIB initiatives on campus,
how to engage with alumni and donors who did not feel a strong sense of belonging
during their college experience, and more.