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Vice-Chancellor's
Diversity and Inclusion fund (VCDF)
The VCDF has continued this year, a total of 22
applications were submitted, of which 13 received funding totalling
£35,477.65. Projects were awarded
funding in relation to race, gender, disability, class, caring responsibilities
and intersectionality.
This year we introduced a process to enable VCDF project
outcomes to be communicated to the EDI Committee, so that Committee members can
cascade information back to their areas and incorporate learning into core
business where applicable. There were
two presentations in person:
- A Class Act - a project exploring the class-related barriers to career progression as experienced or felt by colleagues.
- Empowered Bodies – a project exploring the relationship between the built environment, gender and bodily autonomy, critiquing issues arising from biased social constructs in HE and gender stereotypes.
The Committee also received written reviews for two
projects:
- Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic (BAME) Staff Network Away Day – focused on strengthening the BAME Network’s strategic and operational focus through capacity building, the day was informed by participatory action research methodology and included a series of participatory activities.
- WISCing Away - a project to widen participation and engagement of Woman in Information Science and Computing (WISC)WISC, further establishing its identity within the Department of CIS, in addition to providing women and non-binary students interested in Computer and Information Science subjects with the opportunity to come together as a critical mass.
DFN
Project Search
In
September 2023, Northumbria became host business for DFN Project Search, a
year-long supported internship programme for young people with autism and/or a
learning disability, in partnership with Newcastle City Council, City Learning,
DFN and Sodexo.
This
year, twelve interns participated in an employability skills programme
delivered onsite by City Learning colleagues which included three ten-week work
placements in roles at Northumbria and Sodexo.
The
programme provides a fully immersive experience to help interns transition
successfully into the world of work in a structured and supported way. The programme was the first in the region and
is one of over 160 across the UK. Nationally,
around 70% of participants go on to secure employment either with the host
organisation or elsewhere, and participants receive ongoing support with job
applications and interview skills. The
programme allows Northumbria to positively contribute to employability outcomes
for young people in our region who would not normally engage with us through
our higher education offer.
Campus
Accessibility Reviews
Following a
student-led project last year to develop a framework to assess accessibility on
campus and assess a range of buildings, further reviews were conducted in
Faculties and the findings passed to the Accessibility Review Group for
consideration and action.
University-wide
Leadership Programmes
- Diversifying
Leadership -This
year, 3 colleagues attended Advance HE’s Diversifying Leadership programme,
bringing the total number of colleagues supported to participate since 2021 to
18. All colleagues supported were from global majority backgrounds. All 18
colleagues meet our DVC regularly as our Diverse Leaders at Northumbria group.
This has provided a new space for dialogue about the University’s intentions
towards diversity within leadership.
- Aurora
Women’s Leadership Programme - 6 women
participated in Advance HE’s Aurora Programme this year. Led by a team of
leadership experts, participants explore four key areas associated with
leadership success: Identity, Impact and voice, Core Leadership, Politics and
influence, and Adaptive Leadership Skills. There is also an action learning set
element to the programme. We have supported 37 women to attend this programme
over the last five years and places will be offered again in the coming year.
- Senior
Women’s Leadership Programme - Advance
HE’s Senior Women’s Leadership Development Programme is designed specifically
for women in senior positions in higher education to help them take the next
step up or extend their role, profile, and impact. It aims to create more
gender parity in senior leadership within higher education, the programme
enhances technical knowledge of key strategic areas of operation (including
institutional finance, structures and governance) and explores individual
leadership styles, leadership legacy, personal impact and developing political
skills. Northumbria supported 2 women in attending this programme and will
offer further places this coming year.
- LGBTQ+ Leadership Programme - The Stonewall LGBTQ+ Leadership Programme
recognises the impact our identify has on our leadership. Developed by and for LGBTQ+ leaders the
programme balances expertise and peer learning support, providing participants
with a space to nurture their leadership development. In 2023 Northumbria committed to support 2
places on the course for LGBTQ+ colleagues and will do so again in the coming
year.
EDI
Learning
Throughout the
year we offer a range of EDI-related learning opportunities. As well as regular training sessions which
run on a termly basis, we hold invited speaker events, training by specialist
external providers, workshops, awareness-raising sessions and film screenings
spanning all focus areas of inclusion. We also host a variety of online learning resources for colleagues to
learn at their own pace. Over the year, the total attendance of our EDI
events reached 805 overall, this included 612 individual attendees.
The training
offered included:
Understanding
Race Bias eLearning - We have
continued to provide the Understanding Race Bias eLearning, growing colleagues’
capacity for understanding issues aligned to racial inequality and encouraging
self-reflection and opportunities for action.
Domestic
Abuse Guidance - We have revised and strengthened the guidance given to
staff and line managers on how to support those who have experienced or are
experiencing domestic abuse. The guidance signposts staff to internal and
external areas of support.
Basic Introduction to
Inclusive Language - As well as
regular bookable sessions throughout the year, sessions were delivered upon
request to Departments, including Psychology, Campus Services and the SLAS
senior management team and Human Resources. The session explores the role that language can play in fostering a
welcome and inclusive environment, providing participants with space to enhance
their understanding of respectful language, whilst emphasising that there is no
definitive list of inclusive words and phrases.
Adjustments in the Workplace
Training - With separate
sessions for colleagues who require adjustments, and for line managers who are
supporting colleagues who require adjustments, the sessions cover how to use
the Adjustments in the Workplace Passport, and explain the support available
from Health & Safety, Human Resources, Occupational Health and Access to
Work.
T in
Transgender Workshops - Designed and
delivered by Northumbria students, the workshops have continued to be hugely
popular with bookable sessions as well as delivery to Departments and Faculties
on demand. The sessions are a practical
introduction to transgender issues and the different lived experiences faced by
transgender people.
Efforts have focused on the removal of barriers which hinder student success and inclusivity.
Focus has been given to improving accessibility and providing targeted support
based on student feedback. Key actions and achievements include:
- Access and Participation Plan Outcomes: ongoing activities related to the outgoing Access and Participation Plan, with project leads presenting their outcomes at the annual APP Showcase event in June 2024.
- Improvement of Accessibility and Inclusion Processes: collaboration with students to review and enhance accessibility and inclusion processes. This includes the transformation of the Hardship Fund into multiple funding options and the development of the NU Belong support program for student carers, care leavers, and estranged students.
- Student Accessibility Plan (SAP): implementation of new SAP processes, improved communication with teaching staff, and a review of the PGR SAP.
- Student Journey Mapping: partnership with the Customer Experience Team to map the student journey for those with accessibility needs, identifying and addressing key actions to make onboarding more inclusive.
- Research Assistants Recruitment: recruitment of four student Research Assistants to identify effective strategies for addressing barriers related to the outgoing Access and Participation Plan.
- Sanctuary Scholar Scheme: continuation of the Sanctuary Scholar scheme, providing support to students seeking asylum.
Removing Barriers to Sport
Over the last
academic year Northumbria Sport have promoted several activities that have
eliminated barriers within sport at the University. An example of this is our
Just Play programme that has provided FREE sport activity to all students, our
Just Play activities include ten different sports including Futsal, Badminton,
Women’s Football and Basketball.
Over the 2023/24
academic year there were 812 unique participants within our Just Play
programme, with over 60% of students having at least one Widening Participation
characteristic and 300 students being from ethnic minority groups. In the
2024/25 academic year Northumbria Sport will introduce additional activities
such as Pickleball, Women’s Basketball and a Disability sport session. These
sessions will further contribute to improving the accessibility of sport at
Northumbria University and eliminate barriers that prevent students from
engaging. In addition to the ‘Just Play’ sessions, Northumbria Sport have also
offered ‘Just Try’ sessions which aim to remove barriers to participation. The
take up of sessions so far shows 50% of participants are students from ethnic
minority groups.
Graduate School: Removing
Barriers to Participation
The graduate school (and projects undertaken by
teams that support the graduate school) have looked at several ways to remove
barriers to inclusion:
- Additional support is provided to applicants from disadvantaged/under-represented backgrounds (Low participation neighbourhoods; Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic students; low-income backgrounds; disabled students; care-leavers and carers; estranged students; Gypsy, Roma, and Traveller communities; female students into STEM.)
- A day-long recruitment event in January 2024 was hosted for interested candidates to visit Newcastle University and Northumbria University and meet potential supervisors.
- CCAI Pre-application workshops and application resources were provided
- For ReNU CDT projects, a Gender decoder tool was used on findaphd
- 2 studentships ringfenced for UK-domiciled individuals of Black, Asian, or mixed Black or Asian heritage for the NINE DTP.
University Library
The Library have undertaken several activities and actions to remove
barriers to inclusion for students. Following
feedback from international students in Singapore, the timing of Library online
learning skills drop ins were changed from 11am to 9am, to eliminate some of
barriers these students experienced accessing one-to-one online library skills
and information literacy support.
In partnership with local sixth form schools and colleges,
the Library’s Skills Development Team helped to facilitate the NU Allstars
programme. A level students have been able to visit the Library, learn about
using the service and the skills needed to succeed and university, and engage
with the physical Library through a tour and an activity. The knowledge of
academic libraries and how to use them, and the academic skills needed are
transferable skills for success at any university, eliminating barriers to
higher education in general.
Graduate
Futures
To better understand the barriers that students face
engaging with Graduate Futures, the team developed 2 EDI Focus groups in
October 2023 with a focus on BAME & Free School Meal / First
Generation. The findings from the focus groups will help to shape
graduate futures offering with a view to improving communication, skills
sharing and engagement.
As a result of these findings, the team are embarking on a
new project to collect student and graduate case studies to showcase success
stories, increased marketing and communications for the Employability Learning
Fund (ELF) and included diversity of speakers which aligns to an action within the
Race Equality Charter commitments.
Careers
Online
Careers
Online (CO) is our online platform for students and recent graduates to access
careers resources, including the Disabled Students Careers Programme and
International Students Programme. In 2023/24, more than 8,300 WP students
accessed CO and the biggest user groups were: 33% BAME, 23% commuter students,
20% first generation, 17% Low Participation Neighbourhoods (LPN), and 11%
disabled. The platform was also accessed by 5 of our Sanctuary Scholars and
more than 170 young carers.
The Career Workshops are all recorded, and slides are available online
which has substantially increased our reach, resulting in over 7,000 views of
these workshops remotely this academic year.
More students are commuting, working longer hours and are at risk of not
engaging with Northumbria’s optional Graduate Futures careers offer. By
branding our content as episodic “CareerFlix” content, we have received much
recognition for this – including a Northumbria SHINE nomination in 2023 as well
as being shortlisted for a national Association of Graduate Careers Advisory
Services (AGCAS) innovation award for excellence in 2024 and having met with
many HEI’s in the UK to showcase our offer. This is all due to the impact of
this approach to reducing barriers of access to high quality careers education.
Female Accelerator
Programme
Funded by the Susan Dobson Trust, the programme is part
of the university’s commitment to fostering diversity and innovation, providing
a comprehensive series of workshops for women to develop their business ideas
and enhance their business skills. Participants gain access to an array of
resources, including expert mentorship, networking opportunities, and at the
end of the programme they are eligible to pitch for a pot of £15,000. The
programme received 55 applications, places were offered to 14 with 10 accepting,
9 commencing the programme and 8 completing the programme.
Northumbria University’s Female Accelerator Programme is a
testament to the institution’s dedication to gender equality in
entrepreneurship, providing a crucial stepping stone for women aiming to make
significant impacts in their respective industries.
Celebrating Diversity
The SU have delivered and supported societies to deliver
a wide range of events reflecting the diversity of the student campus, this
included; a Bollywood night in Freshers; both key Saudi national days with
guests from across the region; Diwali celebrated in both Newcastle and London;
and Malaysian Lunar New Year.
At the end of the year the SU hosted the Annual Pride
Breakfast, providing a safe space for students and staff to meet before Pride.
This year the number of international societies grew to
24, including Indian, African, Sri Lankan, Pakistani, Saudi and Sudanese, often
with London counterparts to ensure students in London campus have access to
their community.
Gender
Sabbatical officers attended training delivered by Beyond
Equality to better understand how to work with male students on issues around
gender equality, inclusive communities and healthier relationships.
The SU ran three awareness campaigns:
- Encouraging students to participate in the Office for Students research into harassment on campus, which in turn shaped its guidance issued at the end of the academic year and its plans for a new condition of registration for Higher Education bodies around tackling harassment.
- Encouraging students to challenge and report unacceptable behaviours including misogyny, using the University platform and the SafeZone App.
- Encouraging students to access the free provision of anti-spiking products.
The annual Women in Leadership Development Programme
(WILD) was run to coincide with International Women’s Day. This weeklong
programme of workshops and speakers engaged 39 women students to reflect on
their career ambitions post study. We also launched our student carers’ support
group meeting twice monthly, once at Coach Lane – which has the highest number
of female students – and once online to allow any student to participate.
Reflecting both gender and economic insecurity affects
thousands of students nationally., The SU continues to make access to period
products free across all campuses as well as free pregnancy tests.
Mental Health
Male mental health and the challenges around engaging
male students have also been key areas of focus for the SU. Two workshops on
mental health first aid for male students were delivered with Worth Educating,
using their feedback to better understand how to engage male students in
discussions and training around mental health.
Thanks to support
from the University’s Alumni Fund, 161 student places were all fully funded for
mental health first aid training, as part of our continued commitment to
addressing financial barriers.
Another 14 students were trained as peer-to-peer mentors,
supporting 34 of their fellows through a structured programme of coaching and
mentoring using the Bazaar platform.
Working with the University services and local charities
we delivered cross campus Mental Health Day events at City, Coach Lane and
London campuses for over 600 students.
Andy’s Man Club is hosted on a weekly basis in the
Students’ Union to provide a space for male students.
Autism Awareness Event
An Autism Awareness event was delivered collaboratively
with the Student Union for 53 students, along with tours of the Students Union
specifically for those students registered with the University accessibility
team so they could familiarise themselves with the Union before the noise and
stimulation of freshers.
Race and International
Recognising the impact of the conflict in the Middle
East, the Union sought to support students of all backgrounds to ensure that
they were able to both express their views and voice over the situation but
also that all students could feel campus remained a safe place for them. This
work ranged from supporting protests and speaker events to meeting with Jewish
students to hear and address their concerns and all Union staff undertaking
antisemitism training provided by the Union of Jewish Students.
Sexuality and Sexual Health
Northumbria Sport Club Presidents and engagement officers
attended training on “Leading LGBTQ+ Inclusion in Sport” led by Stonewall to
help them understand and tackle challenges in student sport and how to create
and lead an inclusive environment.
Sexual Health Awareness Week in
February focused on inclusivity in sex, to raise awareness across all gender
and sexualities. We were also able to expand provision of free sexual health
products to London to match provision in the North East and through partnership
with Rape Crisis delivered on-campus drop ins.
Economic Equity
With the rising cost of living and no change in student
finance, money concerns are now one of the biggest drivers of inequality in
Higher Education and directly contribute to poor physical and mental health as
well as exacerbating other barriers when it intersects with them.
With support from the University to help address these
issues the Union relaunched its Food Pantry, providing support across all
campuses for students in need of basic provisions alongside using this as a
platform to deliver financial literacy skills and routes to access University
support. We instigated an opportunities fund supporting 47 students to
participate in extracurricular activities and another 71 to meet the costs of
their graduation in terms of gowns and photographs.
Art,
Design and Social Sciences
On the first
Wednesday of the month the faculty has a protected hour for EDI learning for
all colleagues, during which numerous events, workshops and discussion groups have taken place aimed at
fostering a diverse community and working culture. The programme was carefully
curated to ensure a platform for different types of role model, as well as
coverage across EDI issues such as slavery, or student experiences of hate
crime.
In Humanities, a Working Culture Survey was completed in
May by over 40% of research-active colleagues, the findings of which were
presented to the Humanities Executive, and points shared with staff. The Athena Swan Departmental Self-Assessment
Team (DSAT) is using the data to inform a year-long action plan to address the
most pressing issues, and the data will feed into the next Athena Swan
application.
In Design, work is taking place to review funding support
for non-parental carers attendance at external research events. In May, Promotions Peer Learning events were
held as an effective way to engage with colleagues who may not attend larger
events and EDI funding was used to develop a fully accessible PowerPoint
template for use in Blackboard.
Social Sciences have worked with the
Access and Participation team to identify specific departmental issues: the
attainment gap between students from more privileged and less privileged
backgrounds, with the latter outperforming the former at a statistically
significant rate, and female students outperforming male students. Following a
session at our programme review and planning day, we are now collating feedback
and will use this to develop a plan.
Business and Law
In June the faculty hosted the 2024 SHINE - “Sisters in
Higher Education Network Conference". The event, for Black female academics and
students, aimed to explore, address and discover solutions to the deep barriers
and challenges they face in Higher Education to make a positive impact in this
group.
Maternity/paternity leave forms were introduced in 2023
to help line managers support colleagues who are returning from an extended
period of carers, maternity or paternity leave. Take-up is slowly increasing,
and we will be able to gauge the effectiveness of the forms when colleagues
analyse data from our interviews. Discussion has taken place around a more
robust and comprehensive domestic abuse policy that fits with current practice
and developments.
The PLME
Researcher Development Programme was rolled out in February 2024, to support
colleagues in Business and Law with research and promotion/progression
development. Designed for all colleagues, it is particularly focused on those
who are chronologically mid-to-late career but are still early career
researchers. The programme lasts around
six-months, and touches on all phases of the research cycle, from
generating a research idea through to submitting to a journal and
then responding to reviewers’ comments.
Engineering
and Environment
Working with the Organisational Development team, the Faculty
has developed their support offer around academic line management after scope
for development was identified at an EDI culture workshop held in November.
The Faculty has considered accessibility for its students
and colleagues through carrying out building reviews of Ellison and Sutherland,
including a walkaround with the chair of the Accessibility Review Group and the Strategic
Space Planner to find practical solutions to improve step free access routes.
Research and Innovation
The internal Seed Funding Scheme, introduced in 2022, has
been revised for 2024/25 to focus on research idea generation with a single
round of funding per year. We are keen to promote equitable, inclusive, and
positive research cultures and environments through this funding scheme and
will review the EDI data from previous years to ensure that future funding call
requirements and selection processes offer equality of opportunity between
different groups of researchers and positively encourage applications from
under-represented groups.
Charter
Related Actions
- Shadow
Chair Initiative (Pilot 2023-24) - Four
colleagues from our Diverse Leaders at Northumbria group shadowed the Chairs of
Education Committee and Research & Knowledge Exchange Committee, allowing
colleagues not normally in committee-aligned roles to be involved in decision
making and interact with University Executive members (workload allowance
provided). The process has given Committee Chairs the opportunity to hear views
from those working in roles not traditionally represented in those committees.
- Reverse
Mentoring Pilot (2023-24) - Developed
by members of the Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic (BAME) Network and members
of the Race Equality Steering Group, five colleagues from the Senior Leadership
Team (the mentees) have been mentored by 5 BAME Network members. The mentees
have focussed mentoring conversations on specific areas pertaining to racial
equality, creating spaces to grow awareness and generate ideas for addressing
racial inequality. The initiative has provided employees from BAME backgrounds
with opportunities for strategic engagement and an amplification of their
voice. Leaders, who play a role in ongoing cultural change, have heard the
views and opinions of those with different characteristics to themselves.
- Humanities
Doorplates (October 23 to March 24) - An audit of job titles displayed on office doors was
undertaken between October 2023 and March 2024. All office door plates have
been standardised to display ‘Dr’ or ‘Prof’ to ensure that qualifications and
professional titles were represented consistently regardless of gender.
ADSS
A well-attended conference was held
in November 2023 by Northumbria’s Gendered Violence and Abuse Interdisciplinary
Research Team, titled ‘Violence Against Women and Girls: Research into
Practice’ along with a pre-conference screening of the film, ‘LOVE’, which was
attended by many Humanities colleagues.
Business and Law
A wide range of
EDI related research has taken place across the faculty this year. This includes a publication on strategies for understanding
institutional racism in Academia; an edited collection on the Gender Pay Gap
which included a chapter on the gendered nature of promotion criteria, based on
research outcomes from the last Faculty Athena Swan application in 2019; a
qualitative study of how women in African universities navigate the
masculinized ideal academic norm; and the award of a UFHRD Small Research Grant
supporting research on aging and social inclusion in the workplace: Fading
to Grey or shining brightly? Enhancing social inclusion through HRD.
Health and Life Sciences
A ‘Research Application Toolkit’ has been developed in
Sport, Exercise and Rehabilitation to embed EDI considerations in funding
applications and research. Once approved there is potential for this to be
shared more widely.
Trauma
and trauma-informed approaches
A working group was established to look at trauma and
trauma informed approaches, and how we embed these. The work is focused on
trauma in students, staff and research participants and will examine how we can
become more trauma informed. A set of
intranet resources are planned, to support conversations around trauma and
trauma informed practice across the university.
CPD
Modules
A suite of level 4 CPD modules with no entry criteria is
being developed for our public members to access. This focusses on peer and
participatory approaches to research, and is funded in part by Cumbria,
Northumberland and Tyne and Wear NHS Trust.
Expert
by Experience Strategy
HLS has developed a strategy to develop ‘Expert by
Experience’ (EbE) involvement and co-production. The EbE committee, inputs into teaching,
research and knowledge exchange activities. This aligns with our professional bodies requirements for delivering
courses that are fit for purpose and supports us in fulfilling our research
funders requirements of engaging with communities.
Health
Inequalities Symposium
Co-hosted by CHASE and FUSE, the ‘Nothing about us without us:
bridging the research to impact gap for South Asian and Muslim (SAM)
communities’ symposium was held in July. Topics included public
involvement, health literacy, mental health, the inclusion of Halal options in
public institutions’ menus, organ donations, addictions, cancer screening, and
social interventions to tackle loneliness. The event finished by the collective
commitment to keep the momentum initiated by the symposium through the creation
of a network with regular meetings and events to foster collaborative working,
research and the adoption of evidence-based practice.
Return to main EDI Report page.