UPDATED: January 14, 2020
The powder might have been the pandemic, which has had a on people of color. The spark was certainly the police killing of George Floyd in Minnesota last spring. At that, a crucial conversation exploded across the country this past summer, forcing many white Americans to acknowledge the realities of .
and have begun reckoning with these realities as well. The numbers don鈥檛 lie. While 13 percent of the U.S. population is Black, less than one percent of Fortune 500 companies are led by African-American CEOs. And the representation at elite business schools isn鈥檛 vastly more impressive. 鈥淲e knew we needed to do better,鈥 says Marilyn Eckelman, associate dean for graduate programs at the Carroll School of Management. 鈥淎s a business school, we decided to really focus on inclusive leadership.鈥
That has led to the school's聽Inclusive Leadership Forum Series, monthly events running all through this academic year and geared primarily to M.B.A. students. In these online discussions, diversity expert Carol Fulp is giving grad students (and others) guidance and food for thought as they navigate their journeys into the halls of power.
And those students are doing plenty of thinking, organizing, and acting on their own. Notably, a group called Future Leaders Advocacy and Advisory Group (FLAAG) has been active within the school鈥檚 Graduate Management Association, supported as well by the administration. With an eye fixed on their roles as tomorrow鈥檚 business leaders, the students are also helping to promote an equitable environment in their communities and at their university.
鈥淚 think after this summer of unrest, a lot of people came to the realization that they harbor unconscious bias,鈥 says Julia Parker 鈥21, who is Black, grew up in Omaha, Nebraska, and serves as FLAAG鈥檚 community engagement team leader. 鈥淲e want to promote a conversation around that bias and promote a more inclusive leadership and a more inclusive outlook.鈥
Dewin Hernandez 鈥21, who was born in the Dominican Republic and grew up in Lawrence, Massachusetts, is a founding member of FLAAG as well as executive director of Boston College鈥檚 Graduate Student Association (GSA). He has also served as a moderator of Fulp鈥檚 forums.
鈥淭o me, the value of the forum [series] is to provide students the opportunity to look introspectively at what kind of leaders they want to be,鈥 says Hernandez, who will be wrapping up a joint master鈥檚 degree in management and social work, before moving on to a senior consultant role at Deloitte in their government and public services division. 鈥淎nd to think about diversity and how to be an inclusive leader, to drive business in a way that鈥檚 equitable and that addresses the triple bottom line鈥攑eople, environment, and profitability.鈥澛
Already a leader on campus (he's also a recipient of the Diane H. Weiss M.B.A. 鈥85 Memorial Fellowship), Hernandez has organized racial justice programming as part of his GSA role. 鈥淚 want to be intentional about creating a space for learning and a space to really unleash the potential of every individual,鈥 he says, adding that he hopes to carry forward that approach into his career.
Maintaining that mindset is important, students say, because if diversity isn鈥檛 taken seriously in the C-suite, change won鈥檛 happen throughout the organization. 鈥淟eaders inspire,鈥 says Kanal Patel 鈥22, FLAAG鈥檚 vice president for diversity, equity, inclusion, and belonging. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the main characteristic of a leader.鈥 Together with faculty and administrators, FLAAG has helped call attention to questions such as the need for more diverse case studies in management courses.
Students have also been working with Admissions staff to possibly connect accepted students with current students of the same background. 鈥淚f a student from Panama is accepted and is considering 自慰视频, it would make sense for him to hear from鈥 an alum from his country or region, says Jack Ryan 鈥22, who is from Barrington, Rhode Island. 鈥淚t鈥檇 be more relatable than hearing from me, a white guy who grew up in the Boston area.鈥
Patel was born in India and raised in Toronto. She is a part-time M.B.A. student and a full-time senior financial analyst at Dell Technologies. 鈥淢y firsthand experience as a first-generation student and an immigrant has made me passionate about inclusive leadership,鈥 she says. 鈥淭his country is considered to be a melting pot, but there鈥檚 still one culture that considers itself dominant over the others.鈥
Like Patel, many graduate students have extensive professional experience鈥攑revious, ongoing, or both鈥攕o they have more than an academic understanding of organizational dynamics. For example, Parker was the executive director of the Omaha Small Business Network for six years, focusing on low wealth neighborhoods. While she is a full-time student now, she also serves as director of economic development for the Dorchester Bay Economic Development Corporation and engages in micro-investing in minority-owned startups.
On December 7, the Carroll School of Management held its third forum on inclusive leadership, part of a聽year-long series. The latest event took a more personal look at blind spots and unconscious bias (addressed also during聽the second forum). 鈥淲e鈥檙e always going to have blind spots. We鈥檙e not perfect. We鈥檙e human,鈥 said diversity expert Carol Fulp, adding鈥斺淚t鈥檚 our responsibility to be monitoring those blind spots.鈥 Attendees shared examples of blind spots they had experienced along lines of race, age, and socioeconomic class. Fulp聽encouraged listeners to聽聽by assessing 鈥渨hat I did well, how I made an impact, and what I would have done differently鈥 to combat bias.
鈥擟arroll School News
鈥淥f course, I have experience with micro-aggressions in the boardroom,鈥 Parker says. 鈥淚 have encountered a lot of unconscious bias. People just don鈥檛 know what they don鈥檛 know. And I have also experienced gender-based discrimination. I think there鈥檚 been a shift. Before, the mentality was 鈥榞rin and bear it and move on.鈥 Now it鈥檚 very much an imperative that we call these things out, in a well-intentioned and progressive way.鈥
Even as students, many of the Carroll School鈥檚 aspiring leaders are already working to promote diversity and inclusion. Through another 自慰视频 graduate student organization, , Jessica Hanway 鈥22 has partnered with a local Black-owned startup, . The company is working to reduce disparities in health care by producing Afro-textured wigs for cancer patients, which are typically (and indefensibly) hard to come by. Hanway has been helping Coils to Locs conduct a supply chain analysis.
Hanway, who is white, takes inspiration from the stories of the Coils to Locs co-founders, as well as of Carol Fulp. All three are African-American women who left secure jobs to start their own organizations aimed at closing gaps in society. 鈥淭hey鈥檝e shown that people can take risks in their lives to work on issues they care about,鈥 says Hanway, who is a recipient of the Ruth and Stephen Barrett Family Graduate Fellowship. 鈥淚t鈥檚 motivated me to try to follow that work and make changes in the world.鈥
While higher education, along with the rest of society, has miles to go when it comes to fighting racism, the resources to do so exist at Boston College, thanks in large part to students making the time to come together and seek solutions, not to mention a receptive administration. (John and Linda Powers Family Dean Andy Boynton took part in a campus in October and appointed Fulp to the Carroll School鈥檚 Board of Advisors.)
For white students looking to become allies,聽鈥渢he outlets are there at 自慰视频,鈥 says Ryan. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a choice you make to either stay in your bubble or turn to these avenues that break you out of your bubble. You can either engage with [diversity as an issue] and make it a priority and expend mental energy on it, or go about your life and not think about it. But I think the takeaway from this summer was that ignorance is not a good excuse anymore.鈥
Patrick L. Kennedy, Morrissey College 鈥99, is a contributing writer at the Carroll School of Management.
Banner image by Lee Pellegrini, Office of University Communications