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September 27, 2023 - DEIA Cultivation Grants

The Division’s DEIA Cultivation Grants are designed to support projects, programs and events that advance diversity, equity, inclusion and/or antiracism (DEIA) at the college. Any member of the Whitman community can apply for a DEIA Cultivation Grant, although community members with access to their own funding are encouraged to utilize those existing funds rather than apply for grant funding. Preference is given to projects that are innovative and enhance (rather than duplicate) existing college practices.

Proposals that center the needs of historically marginalized communities, improve the campus racial climate or collaborative applications with co-leads from different constituency groups (e.g. staff and students) are also preferred. Awards are capped at $3,000 and application windows will typically open at the end of the spring semester and early in the fall semester (exact dates will be shared through campus communications).

You can find the DEIA Cultivation Grant application form here. For more information regarding the application process, you can reach DEIA Project Specialist Quin Nelson at nelsonqs@whitman.edu.

Examples of past projects supported by Cultivation Grants are below:

  1. Misconceptions of Disability in Outdoor Recreation
    Grant recipients: Outdoor Program (OP) and DISCO
    Grant amount: $2,000
    Grant used to co-sponsor campus visit by Nyles Asher, Outdoor Educator and Environmental Leader for the City of Eugene Riverhouse Outdoor Program in November 2022. The visit, organized by OP staffers Stuart Chapin, Wako Soma and Callay Boire-Shedd in collaboration with Disability and Difference Community (DISCO) representative Sueli Gwiazdowski, involved three different engagements: a training for OP trip leaders on how to deconstruct barriers that individuals with disabilities might encounter on trips, connecting with the DISCO club members for a meal, and a public presentation.

  2. Deepening Our Capacity as White Change Agents
    Grant recipients: Juli Dunn, Mary Raschko, Telara Mcullogh, Bridget Jacobson, Charlotte Scott and Sharon Alker
    Grant amount: $3,000
    Grant used to co-sponsor a two-day professional development and skill-building workshop in January 2023 on recognizing and interrupting the dynamics of white privilege. The session was delivered by Dr. Kathy Obear, DEIA educator and founder of the Center for Transformation and Change.

  3. BHM 365
    Grant recipients: NiQo Bullock and Cassandre Beccai
    Grant amount: $2,600
    Grant used to coordinate a retention and cultural wellness initiative centering the needs and experiences of African, Black and/or Caribbean higher education professionals at Whitman. The program, which runs for a full semester, recognized the need to provide space on campus where Black lives are regularly centered beyond just Black History Month.

  4. Musical Inclusion and the Unheard Terms of DEI Work
    Grant recipient: Stan Thayne
    Grant amount: $840
    Grant used to co-sponsor campus talk delivered by Dr. Anthony Kwame Harrison, the Edward S. Diggs Professor in Humanities and Professor of Sociology and Africana Studies at Virginia Tech on March 2, 2023. Dr. Harrison’s talk, entitled Musical Inclusion and the Unheard Terms of DEI Work, touched on the various ways different types of music and sound contribute to people’s feelings of belonging and/or estrangement within social spaces, arguing that sonic environments should be recognized as important dimensions of diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) work.

  5. You’re Not Gonna Believe Me
    Grant recipient: Rami Ramirez ’25
    Grant amount: $3,000
    Grant used to sponsor art project focused on cultural spaces and representation. Grant recipient used artifacts, furniture, and other curated items to recreate and represent the interior of two southern California bedrooms. The installation includes a depiction of the artist’s own room along with their uncle’s bedroom from the late ’80s and early ’90s. The project seeks “to provide a more holistic view of Chicanos.”

  6. ARMINDA Appropriate Descriptions Effort
    Grant recipients: River Freemont, Libby Miller and Ben Murphy
    Grant amount: $3,000
    Grant used to help defray the cost of securing a consultant to advise the Whitman College Collections Committee in their efforts to provide respectful, accurate and informed descriptions of objects listed in the online institutional repository system (ARMINDA). The need for a consultant is specifically to assist with crafting descriptions for items currently held by the Maxey Museum that come from Tribal Nations across the Pacific Northwest. As the applicants note, “appropriate description is necessary so that relevant tribal communities can locate materials, and in some cases, request to access the objects, restrict the items from public access or request repatriation.”
Published on Sep 27, 2023
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