Teaching about diversity is different from other management and executive education. It involves questioning our institutions and policies, behaviors and choices, definitions of truth and equity, self-images, relationships, and professional roles. It requires a deep personal journey of self-discovery and growth for instructor and student – and sophisticated ways of authentically engaging in simultaneous personal and professional growth. (Find on Amazon.)
Novice teachers will gain insight from the stories of experienced faculty. Sometimes poignant, sometimes hilarious, this easy to read book will not bore. – Reviewer
Teaching Diversity: Listening to the Soul, Speaking from the Heart captures the unique nature of the complex work involved in helping people explore and embrace human diversity in its fullest. There is widespread agreement of the need for this special kind of teaching and learning. There is little agreement on how best to do it. This book set out to address that gap.
It is the outcome of a developmental project by distinguished educators and authors Gallos and Ramsey, who asked seventeen management educators, a highly-diverse group of university professors and corporate trainers all engaged in some aspect of diversity teaching, to join them in a year of learning. Contributors agreed to put aside academic and corporate ways of thinking and writing and to openly explore the importance, personal meaning, nature, preparation for, and challenges of the work. Gallos and Ramsey then wove a polyphonic whole from the free-flowing, iterative exchanges among the contributors into what has been described as an honest and realistic portrait of this personal, at times painful, yet always energizing teaching.
Effective diversity education reaches to the core of instructors and students as both work together to probe a wide spectrum of social and political forces and of personal experiences and responses.
The book offers a unique opportunity to look below the surface and behind the scenes at the diversity teaching and learning process. The result is a powerful exploration of previously unexamined issues — the emotional tension, personal growth, soul searching, intellectual excitement, professional satisfaction, personal shame and pain, setbacks, and deep pleasures in educating and preparing grounded and responsible leaders for an increasingly diverse world.
Teaching Diversity: Listening to the Soul, Speaking from the Heart is a staple in a large number of university, corporate, and government teaching and training resource centers around the world, a testimony to the power of diverse voices speaking openly and powerfully on common issues and concerns.
FROM JOAN
A number of courses and programs still use this book, and I am gratified. I am also sorry that it is no longer available new from the publisher. The book suffered from a revolving door of editors and marketers during its development and release — and Joan Ramsey and I were pushing on a topic that made many uncomfortable. To have done as well as it did with so little publisher assistance speaks to the power of the narratives and the book’s contributions. It has survived (and still trades in used and hand-printed copies) by word of mouth from loyal readers who pass it down to today’s and tomorrow’s leaders, educators, and managers. The book’s content is more vital now than ever as we struggle as individuals, organizations, and nations to understand the full implications of our differences and the best ways to leverage them.
This book has been described as a classic. The process of creating and writing it was a magical, collaborative experience of iterative personal and professional growth for all involved. I am sorry that Jean Ramsey and I did not publish on the research model that underpins the work. It is feminist, deeply personal, engaging, empowering, and a creative wedding of qualitative and action research. Onward!