The school is also letting go of the director of this office, among others.
From the Stanford Daily:
‘Don’t know what we will do’: University dissolves Office for Inclusion, Belonging and Intergroup CommunicationThe University dissolved its Office for Inclusion, Belonging and Intergroup Communication (IBIC) on July 11, laying off its director, Ester Sihite, and one part-time employee. Some of the office’s programs and one staff member were absorbed into the Office of Student Engagement (OSE).The approximately 35 student employees of the office were notified of the news in an email from Assistant Vice Provost for Inclusion, Community and Integrative Learning Samuel Santos on June 12. Santos explained in the email that “ongoing fiscal challenges” were a factor in making the decision.“The reorganization decision was made to preserve and strengthen core elements of student life while anchoring and integrating them within a broader portfolio focused on student wellbeing and engagement,” Santos wrote in an email to The Daily.The IBIC office, which was established in 2016 as the Diversity and First-Gen Office, led workshops and consultations across the University about identity, belonging and difference. The office also hosted programs such as the Peer Facilitation Program and sponsored the academic courses PSYCH 103F: “Intergroup Communication Facilitation” and LEAD 152: “Dialogue Lab: Exploring and Cultivating Our Capacity to Engage Across Difference.”The mission of the office was to build capacity for dialogue across differences and help community members feel belonging, according to Sihite, who has been director since 2022. From 2022 to 2024, the IBIC office led over 60 workshops and projects, and engaged over 1,300 participants, according to an IBIC pamphlet.Sihite told The Daily that she learned the IBIC office would be dissolved and she would be laid off in a June 11 meeting with University administration. She added that the reasoning behind the decision was not conveyed clearly to her. The way the decision was communicated was one of the most “distressing” aspects of the news for Sihite.
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