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A conversation with Elizabeth Moon: ‘You can make change from anywhere’

Getting to know UC ANR's new director of workplace inclusion and belonging

Elizabeth Moon
Elizabeth Moon, UC ANR's newly appointed director of workplace inclusion and belonging, has been building bridges with a broad diversity of cultures and communities her entire life.

As a self-described “Jersey girl” with “half-Italian, half-Scottish” roots, Moon first experienced a multitude of cultures during college at George Washington University, in the diverse patchwork of downtown D.C. As part of her anthropology major, she engaged with the local Laotian community and wrote her senior thesis on Laotian dating and marriage practices.

Then, through Teach for America, Moon taught English to elementary school students in a multicultural, under-resourced community in Houston, Texas. Fulfilling her dream to live and work overseas, Moon moved to South Korea, where she taught English to a wide range of students – from preschoolers to generals in the military.

After her Korean husband came to the U.S. for graduate studies, Moon found herself interacting with and counseling many international graduate students. When the couple moved to Davis, she earned a master's in teaching English as a second language from Sacramento State. She began teaching at American River College, working with students from all over the world – predominantly Eastern Europe – and helping them acclimate to the American style of professional communication and hiring practices.

In 2013, Moon's experience working with international students landed her a position in career development at UC Davis' Graduate School of Management, where she worked in developing career skills for MBAs. She eventually paired her work with her passion for inclusive spaces for all, serving as the GSM Chief Diversity Officer.

We sat down with Moon recently to learn her vision for the newly created position at UC ANR. The following conversation has been edited for clarity and conciseness.

Among your many accomplishments at UC Davis – including creating the Action for Diversity GSM Community Group and developing the GSM DEI Strategic Vision and Goals – you organized community book studies. And this year, the book was “Becoming a Changemaker” by Alex Budak. What is one key takeaway that you can share?

One person in a job that has a certain title cannot singlehandedly transform the whole organization. However, each person in an organization has the power to create real change while working by asking their colleagues questions, such as ‘Where do you see the challenges? What is happening your community, in your group, in your team?'

Acknowledging you're very new to UC ANR, what are some of the challenges and opportunities that you have been seeing?

In my first weeks in this job, from everything I'm reading and the things that I'm starting to hear from people, I'm learning there's a lot of incredible work and energy and effort going into creating an inclusive and equitable community – and California – and really living up to that strategic goal.

But it's in a lot of different places. I really want to take three months to assess where everyone is, because you can't do anything without data these days. You need to have some data, not just anecdotal pieces: What is happening across UC ANR and how can we bring those pieces together?

So even if we're all working on different initiatives in different ways, we should know what the others are doing and thus really create that collaborative integration.

It sounds like you're envisioning your role will be as a nexus of that information and those various initiatives.

I see myself more as someone who brings things together. In my opinion, work in this area never works with a top-down approach with “You must do A” or “You must do B.” For me, it's about engaging, learning and using the language of that community. So it's not big, grandiose gestures, it's really small steps: building trust and putting my own biases to the side to learn from the person in front of me or the community in front of me.

It makes sense that you have to learn and understand a culture before you can change it.

I hate to say “culture change,” because I think sometimes that turns people off. I think it's about bringing people through and into a larger cultural experience. It's a journey. Each of us will be at different places in the journey.

And I want to put it out there: I myself am going to make mistakes. There are going to be times that I will not be successful in what I'm hoping to achieve. Or I may say the wrong thing.

What I really would like to see is that we – each of us – can come into a space authentically, so that people feel comfortable providing constructive feedback so that others can know more and do better. Internally, as staff and academics, we should work to have difficult conversations with respect and an open mind – even if it goes completely against our core.

If you operationalize some key components in the equity space and inclusion space in a way that's not top-heavy, you can start to move people in a certain direction – maybe you won't change their minds, because you're not going to change everyone's mind – but we can start moving our policies and procedures in a way that basically guide people towards a different perspective.

You can't force it. Once you force it, people often stop listening and learning.

Internal defense systems go up and people shut down.

Internal defense systems go up. They think: “You're just trying to change me.” It's a very difficult balance. If you're going to really have “inclusion and belonging,” that means inclusion and belonging of each and every single person – from Butte County to Imperial County.

And that means that there are going to be conflicts. There's no way to ever abolish conflict. There'll always be conflict and change. Those are constants. It's how you can manage through those conflicts and changes in a way that still respects the authenticity of each person coming to the table. And that does take learning, and that does take support and guidance.

It goes back to encouraging constant, active learning, doesn't it?

First and foremost, I think all of us are learners. If each and every one of us comes to a conversation with curiosity, with the skill set to ask curious questions, it can really help to break down some of those barriers. Questions like: “Why would you like to do that? How do you see that working? In what ways does that help us be better? Where else can I find more information about what you're discussing?”

Today in the Leadership DEI Discussion Group, we were listening to this TEDx talk about the “single story” and making sure that each one of us understands that sometimes, without us even knowing, we're presenting a single story. And we need to have those multitude of perspectives.

I started watching Ethan Ireland's videos, “Voices of CalNat,” and they're incredible. Having all those voices helps us to not have that “single story.”

In more concrete terms, how will you be listening and learning across UC ANR, in the coming weeks and months?

I know we have the At Work survey, but I would like to do an additive survey to gauge the feelings of our internal community, our academics and staff, and gain more information about their perspectives and the challenges that each community is working on. What is happening in Yolo County may not be the same as what's happening in Sacramento County: What are the differences within those communities that needs to be more specifically addressed?

Race needs to be a part of it, but there's also sexual orientation, there's gender, there's religious views – there are multiple aspects of diversity that need to be looked at.

As I'm doing these listening tours, I'd also like to start creating some focus groups – from small-group, one-hour sessions that are just conversations with folks to larger-scale meetings at some point – to start some design thinking around DEI at ANR, so that it's a collaborative process.

I am focusing on these aspects of inclusion and belonging, but by no means am I the only expert in this building. There are people who have so much expertise in a lot of different areas, and I'm going to be relying on them for their expertise to point me in the right direction to learn about that area.

I come from a generation where perfection was required and expected. But what I've learned over the last nine years at the Graduate School of Management is failure is okay. Failure just means that you're one step closer to the learning that's going to take you to where you need to go.

Located at the Second Street Building in Davis, Moon can be reached at emoon@ucanr.edu and (530) 883-1174.

Posted on Tuesday, March 28, 2023 at 1:18 PM
  • Author: Mike Hsu
Tags: Diversity (21), Elizabeth Moon (6), March 2023 (18)

Cybersecurity tips for travel, admin rights available online

Jaki Hsieh Wojan, chief information security officer, has recorded two brief videos that employees may watch at their convenience to learn more about cybersecurity.

One video discusses best practices and general advice for securing devices, such as laptops, when traveling internationally. If you are planning a trip to another country and need to bring work materials, it is a must watch. “Travel Advice with Jaki Wojan” is on YouTube at https://youtu.be/nIviuY5g9_0.

The other video discusses privileged access or administrative rights on local devices. It describes the risks and responsibilities associated with having privileged access, and the process for acquiring those rights. Anyone who wants administrative rights on their device should watch “Admin Rights & Cybersecurity Best Practices with Jaki Wojan” at https://youtu.be/NixotK0SUy4 before submitting a request to IT.

Posted on Tuesday, March 28, 2023 at 9:22 AM

Sierra Foothill REC seeks research proposals

The UC Sierra Foothill Research and Extension Center is soliciting proposals from April 1 to May 12 to support new and continuing research on rangeland and oak woodland ecology and management, beef cattle health, production and management, as well as related agricultural and natural resource themes important to California.

Basic resources and facilities to support research include 5,000 acres of northern Sierra foothill oak woodland–annual grass rangeland as well as irrigated pastures, riparian areas and access to the Yuba River. An approximately 160 head cow-calf herd and access to up to 300 head of steers/heifers to support animal production, animal health and grazing research. SFREC maintains a dry lab for sample processing, a dormitory as well as a large and small conference room.

The Center's Research Advisory Committee will evaluate proposed research for scientific merit and regional need. Approved projects will be eligible for center-provided support, which includes land, labor, technical assistance, equipment and facilities.

Proposals may be submitted through the REC Manage System via the SFREC website: https://sfrec.ucanr.edu/Research/proposal. For full consideration, please submit your proposal by May 12, 2023.

Posted on Sunday, March 26, 2023 at 1:54 PM

“Advancing Health Equity” webinars hosted by UC ANR and UCSF

Have you wondered how UC ANR can make a difference in advancing health equity? 

UC ANR's Community Nutrition and Health unit is proud to host a three-part training series on “Advancing Health Equity” in collaboration with UC San Francisco School of Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, and Center for Child and Community Health. UC ANR educators, supervisors, advisors and specialists from across our statewide programs and initiatives are invited to attend. 

This will be an interactive learning opportunity to come together and visualize how UC ANR can address critical health disparities Californians face and put into practice the opportunities outlined in our Strategic Initiatives Health Equity Concept Note (found here on the UC ANR website).

Please save the dates and plan to join this 3-part series:

Session 1: 2-3:30 p.m., Wed. Apr. 5

Build your familiarity and understanding of core concepts related to health equity to establish a shared language about health equity at UC ANR.

Zoom Meeting

https://ucanr.zoom.us/j/92318469375

Meeting ID: 923 1846 9375

One tap mobile

+16699006833,,92318469375# US (San Jose)

+16694449171,,92318469375# US

Session 2: 2-3:30 p.m., Wed. May 3

Identify how existing UC ANR work fits into the concepts and goals related to health equity including addressing the social determinants of health and policy, systems and environmental change work.

Zoom Meeting

https://ucanr.zoom.us/j/96840522425

Meeting ID: 968 4052 2425

One tap mobile

+16699006833,,96840522425# US (San Jose)

+16694449171,,96840522425# US

Session 3: 2-3:30 p.m., Wed. June 7

Inform new areas and approaches UC ANR can work in to advance health equity in the future including transitioning from expert to partner within the communities that we serve.

Zoom Meeting

https://ucanr.zoom.us/j/98465748502

Meeting ID: 984 6574 8502

One tap mobile

+16694449171,,98465748502# US

+16699006833,,98465748502# US (San Jose)

 

 

Posted on Sunday, March 26, 2023 at 10:40 AM
  • Author: Amira Resnick, Director, Community Nutrition and Health

Please complete and share wildfire defensible-space survey

Survey participants can find the wildfire risk for their area by typing a zip code into map.

The California Board of Forestry and Fire Protection has created a public survey to help develop a baseline estimate of work needed to implement Zone 0 – clearing the first five feet surrounding any structure of combustibles such as woody plants, mulch and wood fences. This will inform their economic impact analysis for the regulations, which are intended to protect homes, businesses and communities.

The board has asked UC ANR staff and academics to distribute the survey through their networks to maximize responses.

The following is suggested text for social media and email sharing: 

“Your input is needed! UC Cooperative Extension is partnering with the California Board of Forestry and Fire Protection to develop a new defensible space zone for wildfire resilience within the first 5 feet of a structure, known as Zone 0. We're asking California residents and business owners to help inform cost estimates for the implementation of these new science-driven defensible space standards. Please complete the 5-10 minute survey at https://forms.office.com/g/peGA5QuDfn. It's open through April 5.”

Posted on Friday, March 24, 2023 at 11:28 PM
Tags: March 2023 (18), wildfire (9)

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