Academic Year 2021-2022

Bridge the Gap

This event is a campus-wide diversity initiative inspired by The Museum of Tolerance. This interactive educational initiative uses photographs, props, videos, and recordings to educate and engage the CSU Channel Islands community in dialogue around topics that have historically and currently affect members of our community. The Multicultural Dream Center is running sessions every 15 minutes and the experience should take about 35-40 minutes.

This year, the event is being held during the following days/times:

DATES: Tuesday, Nov. 16 - Thursday, Nov. 18
TIMES: 9 am to 4:40 pm
LOCATION: Check-in at Broome Plaza

Flyer

Art With Impact: Wellness in Words

Exploring the intersection of hope and mental health through film and poetry.
FREE EVENT - Register
DATE: Monday, November 22, 2021
TIME: 5:00 PM - 7:00 PM
LOCATION: Online Event
Option to join anonymously

Academic Year 2020-2021

Broome Library is excited to present its June lecturers for GLBTQ+ Pride Month!

On Monday June 7th at 4:00pm Pacific, J. Cagandahan, RN, offers their lecture “Thrive with Pride,” which will cover basic cultural competency of the LGBTQIA+ demographic and acquaint attendees with the language that is unique to the transgender experience. All interested may register for free.

On Wednesday, June 9th at 4:00pm Pacific, scholar S. A. Smythe will be speaking on “Black Trans Imaginaries.” All interested may register for free.

On Wednesday, June 16th at 4:00pm Pacific, Addison Rose Vincent will speak on “Gender Inclusive Communication.” All interested may register for free.

On Thursday, June 24th at 4:00pm Pacific, CI’s own Steve Stratton will speak – stay tuned for details!

For more details on speakers and descriptions of the lectures, please see the Library’s events calendar.

Moving From Courageous Conversations to Collaborative Action: Building a Beloved Community

Students, faculty, staff and administrators addressing our challenges collectively Facilitated By

DR. ALMA CLAYTON-PEDERSEN

DATE: Thursday, March 25, 2021

TIME: 3:00 PM - 5:00 PM

RSVP: https://bit.ly/3150XsX

For more information about this event, contact Jeannette Edwards, Centers Coordinator at jeannette.edwards@csuci.edu.

This event is being hosted by the Center for Multicultural Engagement with the support of the Division of Academic Affairs and the Division of Student Affairs.

Campus Reading Celebration AY 2020-2021

white background with photo of Safiya Noble in a black jacket

Speaker/Author Selection: Dr. Safiya Umoja Noble

Book Selection: Algorithms of Oppression: How Search Engines Reinforce Racism

DATE: Wednesday, APRIL 7
TIME: 5:30 PM - 7:30 PM
LOCATION: WEBINAR (virtual)
For more information about the Campus Reading Celebration and how to get a FREE copy of
"Algorithms of Oppression: How Search Engines Reinforce Racism"
Visit the Campus Reading Celebration webpage at https://www.csuci.edu/crc/

Art With Impact

Dark blue background, white lettering announcing event four hands, two on each side, one holding a leaf, two holding flowers and one holding a branch wiht leves on it logos for campus entities are located on the bottom

Movies for Mental Health is a virtual workshop led by a facilitator from Art With Impact, a nonprofit that uses the emotional power of short film to initiate dialogue with students on the topic of mental health, particularly focused on how the pandemic has had an impact on us individually, our families, our university, and our community. CSU Channel Islands will host the workshop virtually Thursday, April 22nd from 5:00 – 7:00 PM PST. We will have a facilitated discussion, three short films from Art With Impact’s library, mind-body activities, and a panel consisting of students with lived experience and mental health resources from Counseling and Psychological Services (CAPS), Wellness Promotion Education (WPE), and Ventura County Behavioral Health (VCBH).

RSVP to receive Zoom link: http://bit.ly/csuci-m4mho

Ongoing Events

Our Stories Matter Discussion Series

This series of discussions will consist of focused interdisciplinary evidence-based perspectives presented by at least two faculty and/or invited experts who will speak on and discuss specific topics related to fascism, white supremacy, current events (local to global), in the context of CI's values of diversity, equity, and inclusion.

Spring 2021 Series

Student Activism 101 Workshop

Manuel Crillo

DATE: Wednesday, March 24
TIME: 3:00PM - 4:30PM

Cindy Wiesner

DATE: Wednesday, April 7
TIME: 3:00PM - 4:30PM
orange background with white a black font announcing event with descritpion of speakers and zoom link to join

Fall 2020 Series

This series will be taking place in the CME Zoom Meeting Room

Click to join the meeting: https://csuci.zoom.us/j/96501529827
Meeting ID: 965 0152 9827
Or iPhone one-tap :
US: +16699006833,,96501529827# or +13462487799,,96501529827#
Or Telephone:
Dial(for higher quality, dial a number based on your current location):
US: +1 669 900 6833 or +1 346 248 7799 or +1 253 215 8782 or +1 301 715 8592 or +1 312 626 6799 or +1 646 558 8656
International numbers available: https://csuci.zoom.us/u/aNYoYF8Fa

Wednesday, September 30 beginning at 4:00PM

Pandemic Politics

How Health Crises Reveal Inequalities

Health is considered political when there is debate on the cause of the problem, disagreement on who's responsible for addressing the issue, and when it affects people disproportionately. A better understanding of all of these dimensions requires (1) exploration of the link between health and stigma/blame/shame, and (2) shedding light on health disparities and the social determinants of health.
Dr. Katie Elder (Health Communication) and Dr. Andrea Grove (political Science/Global Studies) discuss these issues in the cases of HIV/AIDS and COVID-19, both in the United States and globally.
The discussion explores how elements of structural violence, such as racism and colonialism, underlie public health debates in the national and international contexts.
Please join us via Zoom beginning at 4:00 PM Wednesday, September 30
Click to join the meeting: https://csuci.zoom.us/j/96501529827
For more information, please contact Mission Centers Coordinator, Jeannette Edwards at jeannette.edwards@csuci.edu

Previous Our Stories Matter Discussion Series Topics

We held the first of our speaker series, directly addressing aspects of white supremacy on Wednesday, February 07, 2018 in BRO 1320 from 5:30pm to 7:30pm. We held them during the 2017-2018 AY the first Wednesday of every month to develop a regular community discussion of pressing and divisive issues. Other topics addressed the challenge and importance of technology and screen use, the polarization of the current political landscape, and those left out the #MeToo Movement (e.g., men who have been abused and the LGBTQ+ community).

Fall 2019 Series

OSM 9-18-19 flyer
DATE: Wednesday, September 18
TIME: 5:30pm
LOCATION: BRO 1360
Light refreshments provided

"Oh Captain, My Captain!"

Engaging Students to Think Differently

Join us for another Our Stories Matter Discussion with Tim Allison (Political Science) and Christy Teranishi Martinez (Psychology) as they discuss their teaching, research, and community engagement activities involving experiential learning.
Integrating concepts of cultural literacy to draw connections between politics, art, music, culture, psychology, history, Tim Allison (Political Science) believes experiential learning is key to connecting with CI transfer students and first generation college students. This semester he will take his Judicial Process class to the Ventura County courthouse, his Criminal Law class to the Ventura County jail, and a class to Santa Rosa Island to learn about the history infighting between interest groups over the direction and control of the island. Experiential learning has changed the way he views his role of teaching in the classroom. Christy Teranishi Martinez (Psychology) has been promoting experiential learning through both teaching and research. She has taken students on study abroad courses to Guanajuato, Peru, Hawaii and Japan, integrating experiential learning and applying hands-on learning techniques to engage her students.
DATE: October 9
TIME: 5:30pm
LOCATION: BRO 1360
TOPIC: Freedom Writers
Light refreshments will be provided
More information to come
DATE: Nov 06
TIME: 5:30pm
LOCATION: BRO 1360
Light refreshments will be provided
More information to come

Spring 2019 Series

osm apr flyer
DATE: Wednesday, May 1
TIME: 5:30pm
LOCATION: Del Norte 1530

Democratic legislatures rely on deliberation to hone legislation and build consensus around policy change. Over the last three decades, changes in American politics have militated against the conditions for meaningful deliberation in the U.S. Congress. Join us as Sean Kelly (Political Science) discusses the antecedents for this practice, and provides suggestions for reform that can improve the quality of deliberation in Congress.

The Global Food Security Act provides funding through the State Department to international development organizations, focusing on world hunger and food insecurity. Megan Schraedley (Communication) will discuss how diverse understandings of complex concepts can be unified through the use of strategic language in order to gain agreement on and pass important policies.

Megan Schraedley, a Communication Lecturer, examines ways humans communicatively organize around food and critiquing how food systems and communication organize how humans create meaning. Her research examines injustices and stigmas in the food system, including food pantries, small farms, and grocery stores. Sean Kelly, Professor and Chair of Political Science, was a former American Political Science Association Congressional Fellow working for the Senate Democratic leadership on health care reform issues, and has written numerous books.Information

osm apr flyer

DATE: Wednesday, April 3
TIME: 5:30pm
LOCATION: Broome Library 2480
Join us for an interdisciplinary discussion of political ideologies.
Michael Powelson (CSUCI Lecturer for History) asks: “What is
Socialism?” Given its uses and abuses in current discourse, he will
offer some historical context for better understanding the concept.
And Matthew Mendez (CSUCI Assistant Professor of Political
Science) studies American politics, with a focus on representation,
race and ethnicity, and political behavior. He will present on
political ideology in the United States.
How do political scientists define it? What are the ideological
differences between the elites and the mass public? How do
niche ideologies like socialism and libertarianism affect the
political landscape? Their presentations will be followed by a
facilitated discussion of the issues raised.Information

our stories matter flyer

DATE: Tuesday, March 5, 2019
TIME: 5:30PM - 7:30PM
LOCATION: Broome Library, 2480
Join us to hear Annie White (Early Childhood Studies) and Jasmine Delgado (Art) discuss their interdisciplinary collaboration, "My Stories," honoring diverse student learner identities. At Santa Rosa Island, students are provided a safe space to share their social and cultural identities through narrative stories, visual art, clay and sculpture, and interpretive dance modalities. Faculty share the impact these stories have on various CI programs, students, peers, families, and communities.

Dr. Annie White's research on New Zealand's Learning Stories approach has had a positive impact on policy and assessment practices in California and beyond. Jasmine Delgado's work uses the language of print, fabric, and collage to address the relationship of various Los Angeles sub/urban landscapes to the community that they serve. My Stories Information

our stories matter flyer

DATE: Wednesday, February 06
TIME: 5:30pm to 7:30pm
LOCATION: BRO 2480
Topic: Fragmented Depictions: Shaping Our Ethnic and Cultural Identities

Join us as Theresa Avila (CSUCI Assistant Professor of Art History) and Fran Elson (a fused glass artist and child of Holocaust survivors in our community) discuss the use of visual displays of people's stories and painful memories. This talk contributes to our understanding of how fragmented identities are developed and pieced together through art and graphic images, helping create awareness of social injustices that have impacted many generations of Latino and Jewish families.

Dr. Theresa Avila specializes in the history, practices, and systems that impact contemporary Latin@x communities within the United States. Fran Elson's multimedia Holocaust memorial project titled "Broken" honors her parents and their families, expressing the fragility of our freedoms through fused glass. Our Stories Matter Information

FALL 2018 Series

DATE: Monday, November 5, 2018
TIME: 5:30pm - 7:30pm
LOCATION: Broome Library 2325
Topic: Revolutionary Heroes: Dying for Redemption

Since its release in February 2018, the film Black Panther has enjoyed a celebratory reception, being hailed for its empowering representations of blackness. CSUCI English professor Raquel Baker will share her reading of supervillain Erik Killmonger as a representation of the willful annihilation of revolutionary black consciousness in a film that ultimately redeems African identity through the degradation of African American-ness. Joining her, Dr. Nicholas Centino, Assistant Professor in Chicano/o Studies will present "Eating the Dead: Disney and Indigenous Grief in Moana, Coco, and Black Panther," a look at how death and grief in communities of color serve as catalyst points in mainstream films produced by Disney.

DATE: Wednesday, September 26, 2018
TIME: 5:30 - 7:30pm
LOCATION: BRO 2325
Topic: Unpacking Undocumented + Citizens: Who's Right? Whose Rights?
Poster for Our Stories Matter
Presenters: Chelsea Strautman, Esq and CI faculty, Kathleen Klompien, Ph.D.
In June 2018, Chelsea Strautman, Esq. joined a federal lawsuit with the ACLU to gain access to 120+ immigrants, unconstitutionally detained in an Oregon federal prison. She will share reflections about her work advocating for immigrants, and shed light on the Immigration Customs Enforcement (ICE), Zero Tolerance Policy.
Kathleen Klompien, Ph.D, has been teaching incarcerated youth in Ventura County. She recently worked to help one of her students get released from Immigration Customs Enforcement (ICE) and will discuss DREAMers' rights.
Our Stories Matter Series (AY 2017-18)
We held the first of our speaker series, directly addressing aspects of white supremacy on Wednesday, February 07, 2018 in BRO 1320 from 5:30pm to 7:30pm. We held them during the 2017-2018 AY the first Wednesday of every month to develop a regular community discussion of pressing and divisive issues. Other topics addressed the challenge and importance of technology and screen use, the polarization of the current political landscape, and those left out the #MeToo Movement (e.g., men who have been abused and the LGBTQ+ community).

February 7

View the February 7 Our Stories Matter poster

March 7

View the March 7 Our Stories Matter poster

April 4: Polarized and Politicized

View the Polarized and Politicized event poster

May 2

View the April 7 Our Stories Matter event poster


Past Events

Our Bodies Our Minds

(Our Stories Matter Discussion Series)

DATE: Wednesday, February 26 2020
TIME: Food served at 5:30 pm Presentation starts at 6:00pm - 8:00pm
LOCATION: Grand Salon
Our Bodies Our Minds poster

SAFE Training

Location Change BEL 2505

Students, Staff, Administrators, and Faculty for Equality (SAFE) workshop presented by the Center for Multicultural Engagement (CME). This workshop will offer participants a chance to become familiar with some of the pressing issues for LGBTQ+ people on campus

SAFE training announcement

Celebrate your Graduation with the Multicultural Dream Center

View the Multicultural Dream Center's Graduating Celebration event poster

The Long Ride: Documentary Screening and Panel Discussion

The UFCW is excited to host a community screening and film discussion of "The Long Ride", a timely documentary film about the historic 2003 Immigrant Workers Freedom Ride that sparked the birth of the new Civil Rights Movement for immigrant workers. They will be engaging in meaningful conversation with the director of the film, Valerie Lapin.
Date: Friday, May 11, 2018
Time: 6:30pm
Location: 816 Camarillo Springs Road, Camarillo

Mental Health & Immigration

Guest Speaker: Dr. Salvador Treviño, Ph.D
Antioch University Santa Barbara

Furthering the national conversation on cultural diversity, Latino historical trauma, the psychology of racism, and matters of social justice from a psychoanalytic perspective, Treviño will discuss his research and share practical ways to better interact with our students of immigrant backgrounds. Treviño's research focuses on the impact of immigration on individuals and entire communities across generations. As we continue to educate ourselves and our campus on the issues faced by our undocumented student population, this event will supply you with the skills and tools to help undocumented students and students who are the children of immigrants who may feel uncertainty during our current political climate.
Date: WEDNESDAY, MARCH 28, 2018
Time: 4:00PM TO 6:00PM
Location: PETIT SALON

View the Mental Health and Immigration event poster (PDF, 1.4MB)

Women's Recognition Luncheon Awards

Keynote Speaker: Yesika Salgado
https://www.yesikasalgado.com/
Date: Tuesday, March 6, 2018
Time: 11am - 12:30pm
Location: Petit Salon

Neurodiversity: A Compass to a Changing World

View Neurodiversity event poster

Bridge the Gap

Inspired from the Museum of Tolerance in Los Angeles, faculty, staff, and students are all welcome to participate in the event. Bridge the Gap is a full sensory, facilitated experience and is approximately 20 minutes per group of about 20 participants for the tours followed by a 15 minute debrief, and optional pledge and giveaways.
Date: Wednesday, February 28, 2018 & Thursday, March 1, 2018
Time: 9:00am to 5:00pm
Location: Grand Salon

Reflections of Diversity in Theater, Television & Film: David E Talbert

Critically-acclaimed author, playwright, director, and film and television producer David E. Talbert will visit CI on Wednesday, November 15 to discuss his bodies of work, successful career and the challenges he faced related to diversity and inclusion in the entertainment industry. Join the campus community at 6:30pm in the Grand Salon to hear about Mr. Talbert's achievements and how the entertainment industry impacts people of color.

Admission free for CSUCI students, faculty and staff; $10 for non-CSUCI students with valid ID; and $20 for general public. For more information contact LaSonya Davis at 559-289-1477 or lasonya.davis@csuci.edu

View Reflections of Diversity event poster

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