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by Michael Shelton, M.S., C.A.C., C.E.T.
The previous article in this series on managing diversity and the camp
industry discussed the primary challenge facing any diversification effort
is organizational change. The second article in this series described
the pivotal role of a leader in a change effort (and indeed if a leader
is not the right person to lead a specified change effort, he or she
should place somebody in charge that does have both requisite skills
and motivation). The third article stressed the need for organizational
evaluation and assessment prior to initiating a change effort. This current
article builds upon the ideas presented in the earlier articles and offers
some suggestions regarding organizational change for the ultimate goal
of participant diversification. If a camp has a qualified staff person
leading its diversity effort and has performed a diversity audit/assessment,
the camp is now prepared to foster diversity within its programs and
among staff and campers.
Internal Versus External Forces Changing demographics is but one of
the many challenges confronting camps and other organizations. Other
challenges include competitive pressure from other youth-serving agencies,
changes in parental expectations, and technological advancements. Specific
examples include changing state and federal regulations for young workers,
fewer employees as a result of higher paying jobs elsewhere, and competition
from other organizations that offer summer programming. Thus a camp that
is intent on participant diversity will still face other external challenges
that must be managed concurrently (all illustrations adapted with permission
from Kilburg, R. 2000. Executive Coaching, Washington, D.C.: American
Psychological Association—see Figure 1).

At the same time a camp
is facing external challenges, there are a myriad of internal problems
that can act in tandem with external forces to create a damaging downward
spiral. Some of the forces include co-worker conflict, a lack of mission
clarity, weak or inadequate leadership, deviant norms, general workplace
apathy, and/or a lack of skills and/or resources necessary for completion
of a job. Imagine a scenario in which a camp is faced with a sudden negative
outside force for which the director lacks sufficient skills, and the
staff members are overloaded with work and are fighting among themselves.
Will this camp be able to generate solutions and cope with the external
force? A camp administration that recognizes diversity issues rank high
on a list of challenges may still have other innumerable internal problems
that prevent it from anymore than a mere cursory—and therefore
predestined to failure—change effort. (See Figure 2.)

Figure 3 demonstrates the combination of internal and external forces
that assault organizations (sometimes on a daily basis).

With such a
bombardment of forces, it is no wonder that some camps fail or remain
in stasis, unable to make major improvements and advancements. Fortunately,
every camp has strengths. These are referred to as balancing or barrier
forces (Kilburg, 2000). These can include administrative excellence,
strong leadership, a positive work environment, an organizational structure
that is flexible and rewards creativity, and a recognition that personal
and professional well-being of staff members is of paramount importance
to success. These forces counteract the internal and external forces.
An illustration of the effect of barrier or balancing forces (BBFs) is
seen in Figure 4.

As the illustration shows, barrier or balancing forces
maintain a safety margin. Negative external forces are kept outside the
core functioning of the camp while, at the same time, internal influences
are counteracted by the BBFs. The more BBFs that exist, the more external
and internal forces of a negative nature can be managed. Attempts to
cope with external and internal forces without sufficient BBFs eventually
wear on the camp and staff.
A well-received 2006 study by Linnehan, Chrobot-Mason, & Konrad
asked over eight hundred diversity educators their opinions on the behaviors
necessary for success with diverse demographics. Four distinct categories
of behaviors were found. Each of these can be considered as BBFs for
our camps. Camps that do not promulgate and practice these behaviors
will never achieve success with diversity.
- The camp is willing to
confront bias.
- All individuals are treated with respect (staff,
campers, parents, community members, vendors).
- Proactive attempts
to understand other cultures are considered imperative.
- The camp
acts inclusively (i.e., is willing to include diverse demographic groups
in all areas of programming).
In addition to the BBFs mentioned earlier (e.g., strong
leadership and a positive work environment), these four are the most
conducive to demographic diversification. Camps that do not act inclusively,
lack respect and appreciation of differences, and are unwilling to confront
bias and prejudice within their own settings will never be able to cope
with the ever-growing external force of diversity even if they have BBFs
sufficient to deal with a host of other pressing issues. These four are
the requisite BBFs that, along with other BBFs within the camp, will
prepare the foundation for success with diversity. A cultural audit will
indicate the strengths and weaknesses in regard to the diversity-specific
BBFs.
Cultivating Diversity at Camp
After completing a cultural audit,
the most common next step in diversity management is to create a more
diverse workplace. It would be reassuring to believe that a camp's
reputation, accreditation, and general positive environment would suffice
to encourage parents to enroll their children regardless of their cultural
background. Unfortunately, this is not necessarily true. It is still
important for prospective families to see some type of representation
of their cultural group in a camp's staffing. Thus the active recruitment
of employees from diverse backgrounds is typically the first intervention
in a diversity agenda. More specifically, a camp may choose to actively
recruit staff members from indicated demographic groups. This resembles
an affirmative action intervention.
In addition to inclusive hiring,
camps should adopt awareness and sensitivity trainings. It is now common
custom for just about any agency and organization to mandate a cultural
awareness training, particularly those in the human services fields.
These trainings can last from a half-day to three entire days. Through
these trainings, it is hoped that we will recognize our own personal
prejudices, learn how to respond to diversity in the workplace, act inclusively,
and, of paramount importance, treat others with respect.
The final tier
of diversity management builds on EEOC regulations, affirmative action,
and cultural awareness and sensitivity training. In the past, most diversity
interventions were concerned with its legal regulation. And it is true
that diversity became so intertwined with legal concerns that composition
and compliance became the paramount issues befuddling organizations. Little
consideration was given to the positive and negative consequences of
diversity for organizational effectiveness. But in the past decade we
have begun to see research into the advantages and disadvantages of diversity
as discussed in this article series. Diversity can have positive and
negative ramifications for organizations and the individuals that work
within these environments.
Acceptance of a New Model
Diversity management
as practiced in the final tier hinges on our acceptance of a new model
of diversity. In short, we are looking at two organizational internal
paradigm shifts introduced in earlier articles:
- Our camps must change
in order to collaborate with new demographic populations. Just hiring
a person to act as cultural liaison and offering existing staff sensitivity
and awareness training is not sufficient. What exactly does a targeted
population need from and within our camp to satisfy its needs?
- Use
the "Emerging Paradigm" (introduced in the second article).
Under this paradigm, diversity is truly celebrated. Individuals are tapped
for their differences. Their often-different perspectives are utilized
for the benefits associated with diversity, including creativity, problem
solving, and organizational flexibility. Diversity enhances the entire
workplace and is incorporated into the organization's mission,
goals, strategies, and overall culture. The overriding organizational
goal is to learn the requisite skills to interact successfully with
any demographic group. Once a foundation of intercultural excellence
is in place, we can fill in the details with information regarding
a targeted group.
Cultivating Success With Identified Groups
Thus far all of our
efforts at diversity have been focused inwardly in both examining and
changing the organizational factors that may hinder a diversity effort
while fostering BBFs associated with successful diversity. At the same
time, our efforts must be directed outward to the demographic groups
that are the potential new consumers of our camps.
Camp professionals
firmly believe that camps really do have a positive influence, and we
have both research and anecdotal evidence to support our claims. But
healthful benefits by themselves do not necessarily sell a product. We
can use the public health research base to assist us with clarification.
The physical and mental benefits of physical exercise have been widely
touted, and polls find that most Americans recognize this component of
health. Still, only a minority participate in the daily amount of prescribed
exercise. Thus, if we want to facilitate a relationship with diverse
groups, we must approach them with the knowledge that the benefits of
camps will not impress a large number of individuals enough to attend
our facilities.
Public health specialists find that community interventions require
four steps, each of which is applicable to maximizing diversity in our
camps:
- Start locally.
A cultural audit has hopefully identified prevalent demographic groups
that might be prospective consumers for a camp. Start with these groups.
Don't focus
attention on a Korean community two states to the west of your facility
when a Latino community is burgeoning several miles from the entrance
gates of the camp. Discern the needs, desires, beliefs about youth
development, and childcare customs of these local demographics in order
to best modify a camp or to, at the least, have ready explanations
for the immutable customs of our camps that may stand in stark contrast
to their own.
- Start with the easiest populations.
I recognize that there are readers that are natural thrill seekers
and that instinctively have the desire to overcome any obstacle placed
before them. This is a wonderful trait to have. But for the sake of
your camp, don't begin your diversity
effort with the most challenging population you can find, A camp that has several
bilingual Hispanic staff members and inroads into a multi-generational Hispanic
community will find it much more successful to target this population than that
of an immigrant Vietnamese group new to the United States. The future is filled
with changing demographic groups, so there is no need to foist unnecessary challenges
upon our camps. Recall that a camp's ultimate goal is to learn
the skills to work with any demographic population. Start the inevitable
learning curve with an easy population.
- Generate short-term wins.
Even though your camp may have two-week sessions, don't begin a diversity
intervention with the expectation that new demographics will be so obliging.
Maybe a weekend introductory camp for new groups would suffice. Attracting the
attention of a local ethnic newspaper is a positive beginning. I hate to say
this to camp professionals, but "lower the preliminary expectations" in
regards to the extent of diversity. Creating short-term positive win-win
experiences for the indicated population and the camp itself is far
more beneficial than a highly touted but ultimately marginally attended
camp event.
- Build sustainability into the process.
Grant fundees have learned that funders—whether public or private—now
require a component of sustainability before funding a project. In short, a pilot
study or demonstration project must explicitly describe how the project will
continue even after the original funding is depleted. Camps should take heed
of this, and we too should look at how to sustain the cultural change efforts
we initiate. A short-term success will lead to nothing if we don't
think of how to sustain the success. This could involve media coverage,
testimonials, the use of contact people, and periodic updates to indicated
communities. Too many agencies have learned (including the administration
of my own camp) that even the most stellar one-time success with a
new demographic group does not inevitably lead to further group involvement
without ongoing efforts.
Necessary for Success
Our camps will have to undergo a multi-tiered and concomitant number
of changes in order for them to be successful with increasing diversity.
This article introduced the four most recognized BBFs necessary for this
success. Concurrent with this is the understanding that we have to make
ongoing outreach efforts with these same diverse communities to engage
their interest and support.
While many camps could afford an outside "expert" to lead
staff through a one-day sensitivity and awareness training, far fewer
could afford the expense of this expert to lead a long-term change effort
targeting diversity. And, believe me, this success is a long-term process;
this article itself indicated that both internal and external changes
must occur, none of which can happen quickly or as an impromptu afterthought.
This series of articles has introduced readers to sufficient resources
to start the process. We know what to look for in the "right" leader
for the change. We have enough information to perform a preliminary cultural
audit. And we understand the hierarchy of internal and external changes needed
for long-term success with diversity. The next, and final, article in this series
will introduce readers to the myriad number of resources available to assist
administrators in their quest to create a camp that has the ability to be successful
with any demographic group.
| References |
| Alba, R. & Nee, V. (2003). Remaking the
American mainstream. Massachusetts: Harvard University Press.` |
| Kilburg, R. (2000). Executive coaching. Washington, DC: American Psychological
Association. |
| Linnehan, F., Chrobot-Mason, D. & Konrad,
A. (in press). Diversity attitudes and norms: The role of ethnic
identity and relational demography. Journal of Organizational Behavior. |
| Schuck, P. (2003). Diversity in America. Massachusetts: Belknap Press. |
Originally published in the 2007 March/April
issue of Camping Magazine. |