Advancing Diversity and Inclusion:
A Conversation with CSU’s APIDA Leaders

In celebration of Asian Pacific Islander Desi American Heritage Month, some of the CSU's APIDA leaders reflect on their journey and inspiration.

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The California State University is comprised of some of the most academically, economically and ethnically diverse students, faculty and staff in the nation. Its leaders not only reflect the unique identities of community members, but they also work to promote equity and inclusion to empower those who come after them.

To mark the occasion of Asian Pacific Islander D​esi American Heritage Month, we asked some of the CSU’s APIDA leaders to share their journey and what inspires their work.

Read reflections from CSU presidents Tom Jackson Jr. and Richard Yao​ and trustees Raji Kaur Brar, Wenda Fong, Jose Antonio Vargas and​ Darlene Yee-Melichar.


Tom Jackson, Jr.

TOM JACKSON JR.
President, Cal Poly Humboldt​

How does your unique APIDA heritage and your lived experiences shape your leadership style?

In my hometown of Seattle, Washington, when I was growing up, it was, as far as I could tell, one-third White, one-third Black and one-third Asian.

Somewhere along the way, I began to realize that I was different. I couldn't be as easily placed into one of those "one-third" categories. My parents were different, and they were also together, and that made me different. How exactly does a Filipina, First Nation, Irish woman from rural Canada meet an African American man from Kansas City and raise a family in Seattle? That is a long story that led to my now "not unique" mix of backgrounds.

My cultural experiences can be defined by church, the people around me and the tastes and smells of the food I enjoyed as a young child. Sometimes we had potatoes, others we had rice or noodles. Some days it was bologna or fish, other days adobo or fry bread. Still today, the smell of adobo, lumpias and pancit reminds me of home.

Church was always Sunday, with an occassional trip to visit relatives in British Columbia or at the Yakima reservation. There were also those times when we visited Grandma and the Sunday Catholic Church experience was swapped out for a Black Baptist church experience. I remember doing Filipino step dances, cultural songs and dances and beating drums. I also remember the same as a young Native boy when visiting reservations. It was fun. It was our culture, and it was about spending time with family.

On occasion one may wonder about my cultural background, but very few actually ask. While I am African American, I am every bit as proud of my roots as a Filipino and Native. It brings a smile to my face when another Filipino sees that within me, and does what so many Filipinos do, which is they ask. It goes something like this: "Hello, hello. Are you Filipino? Yes. I thought I saw some Filipino in you." And then the bonding begins, and the Filipino pride comes out.

How do you use your leadership platform to inspire and empower students, faculty and staff to dream big and pursue their goals? What inspires you to do this important work, day in and day out?

Today, we separate the many groups from the very large "Asian" category, and Filipinos can take pride in finding each other and supporting each other. And many students are like me, in that they are not just one identity.

Like many persons of color, I have been the first person who looks like me to be in certain roles. Many times, I will be the only person of color in the room. Certainly, I have faced criticism based on my differences, as well as when I do not agree with all the perspectives that some might expect from me. This has not always been easy, but I have worked hard to find my voice and encourage others to also have the courage to use their informed voice.

I very much recognize that I have a big obligation and opportunity, as a person of color who has completed college, and as someone who is privileged to have served in leadership roles at multiple universities. I work beside scientists, and future scientists. Teachers, and future teachers. Business leaders, and future business leaders. Artists, and future artists. I have the opportunity to inspire and help shape generations of graduates. These gradutes, in turn, shape their families, agencies, workplaces and the world. This is our shared work, and it is why education is important.​


Richard Yao

Richard Yao
President, CSU Channel Islands​

As one of a small number of APIDA university presidents in the U.S., what motivated you to keep pursuing new and higher roles when you didn't see people like yourself in leadership positions?  

The students have been my motivation since the beginning of my career. I was motivated by and pursued positions that served underrepresented students, including our APIDA students and our first-generation students. As I came into leadership roles in higher education, I began to better understand the magnitude of being an APIDA-identifying leader. I recognize now that I stand on the shoulders of those who came before me, who carved the path to allow me to be in this position. I recognize the responsibility I have to represent our APIDA community, and that recognition starts with our students. Representation matters and engaging with our APIDA community reminds me of how we can further support and serve our APIDA students.​

How does your unique APIDA heritage and your lived experiences shape your leadership style?

While growing up, my family didn't talk about what it means to be APIDA, and we didn't discuss race and ethnicity and the impact it had on our individual experiences. Then growing up in settings that were not diverse, and not having those developmental conversations about identity, I experienced so much turmoil. It wasn't until recently that I recognized how much of my struggle stemmed from a lack of understanding and clarity of what being APIDA meant to me.

I recognize how everyone has their own path to learning to appreciate their racial identities, and now that I have a better understanding of the necessity of talking about our narratives, experiences and intersecting identities, I hope to help facilitate those discussions on our campus. Knowing that we all must challenge ourselves to take that journey, and that a leader's responsibility is to facilitate movement on that journey—fulfilling diversity, equity, inclusion and accessibility (DEIA) goals along the way—influences my leadership style. Individual actions help us advance toward our DEIA goals, which, in turn, facilitates the systemic and policy level changes that are required for long-term change. Everyone must be willing to take the journey to better understand themselves and others through DEIA work.

How do you use your leadership platform to inspire and empower students, faculty and staff to dream big and pursue their goals? What inspires you to do this important work, day in and day out? 

I recognize how important it is to model behavior for our students. How I navigate and cope with adversity, continue to learn and grow as a leader and communicate with others are all part of that process of facilitating others on their leadership journey. I need to be right there with them, taking that extra step to offer support and empathy with all members of our campus community and beyond. This also leads to discussing how not everyone is going to agree when a decision is made, but if we can have an open conversation about the rationale, context and thoughfulness behind these difficult decisions, we can come to a respectful resolution that builds those partnerships and makes us stronger.

The students inspire me every day, and their success is at the forefront of my mind.​ I am deeply aware of the magnitude of this position and how my leadership impacts our students' success. Our campus partners' hard work and dedication inspires my work, and these opportunities for collaboration across divisions maintain that inspiration. The ability for our students to feel a sense of belonging and pride in our university, and that their identities are valued and embraced, is the greatest inspiration as president. 


Raji Kaur Brar

Raji Kaur Brar
Member, CSU Board of Trustees​

How does your unique APIDA heritage and your lived experiences shape your leadership style?

As a first-generation Punjabi Sikh American woman, the way I move in the world has everything to do with my ever-changing, complicated, yet beautiful relationship with my ethnic identity. As is the case with many eldest first-generation Punjabi daughters, I had to help my family navigate life, living in two cultures simultaneously. I was raised to consider the well-being of others first and to consider the impact of my decisions on not just myself but, rather, on the collective whole, my family and my community. I believe my upbringing has served me well, as I have naturally undertaken a servant leadership style.

How do you use your leadership platform to inspire and empower students, faculty and staff to dream big and pursue their goals? What inspires you to do this important work, day in and day out?

Growing up, I never saw anyone who looked like me in any position of power. I believe it's hard to be what you can't see. For me, being able to serve on the CSU Board of Trustees as the first-ever Sikh is empowering in and of itself.

The CSU places high importance on diversity, equity and inclusion. Why are these values important in higher education and how do you ensure that the CSU is an inclusive environment for students from all backgrounds?

For us to make any substantive progress as an institution, as a community, as a people, we must ensure that all people, regardless of what they look like, or where they came from, are included in all decisions that impact their life.

I understand that I am the promise of the CSU actualized. The opportunities afforded me by the CSU are the very reason that I was appointed to the board. Born and raised in the Central Valley, I am a first-generation Sikh American. My parents immigrated to the United States from Punjab, India and began their life in the States working in the fields as farmworkers. My parents eventually separated, and I was raised by a single mother who, due to being illiterate, had limited options for employment. She worked mostly in the fields but was thrilled the day she landed her dream job at Burger King and no longer had to work outside in the sweltering sun.

As a child, I was keenly aware that the proverbial odds, both financially and culturally, were stacked against me. However, my mother taught me there was a sure-fire way to beat these odds, and that was by getting an education. My mother would always tell me that education is a life partner, that it would never leave me and, more importantly,​ that no one could take it from me. By obtaining my bachelor o​f science in biology and master's in health care administration [from California State University, Bakersfield], I became the first one in my family to graduate from college. The upward mobility my college education gave me was life changing. Due to my degree, I obtained a good-paying job with benefits that, in turn, gave me the ability to purchase a new home and a new car.

However, the most important thing my degree did for me was elevate my confidence and self-worth. As a young Sikh woman, being part of a very patriarchal community, I had a lot of obstacles to overcome and by obtaining my degree and my financial freedom, I finally had the ability to make decisions of my own free will.

I have the lived experience of understanding how critical the CSU is in its role as an inclusive environment for students from all backgrounds.​​​


Wenda Fong

Wenda Fong​
CHAIR, CSU Board of Trustees

How does your unique APIDA heritage and your lived experiences shape your leadership style?

I'm a very optimistic person, and I always strive to focus on the positive in life. It's a disposition that has served me well, and I'd like to think its origins were grounded in my family's history.

My grandparents came to California from China over 100 years ago. Like so many immigrants before and since, they were drawn to America, the land of opportunity. They came, my mother often told me, so that with the transformative power of education, their children and grandchildren would never have to lift anything heavier than a pencil.

I grew up in Sacramento in a house my father built. He died when I was just seven, so it was my mother who raised our family's five children. My mother was born in San Francisco's Chinatown, and she would often recount stories about her father—my grandfather—who worked four jobs as a cook to provide a better life and future for his family.

No matter what life threw at them, my ancestors worked hard, they never gave up and they persevered—all while helping those around them with a boundless sense of determination, positivity and optimism. I have always aspired to follow in their footsteps—to make them proud and to maximize the opportunities they afforded me.

How do you use your leadership platform to inspire and empower students, faculty and staff to dream big and pursue their goals? What inspires you to do this important work, day in and day out?

The CSU is the nation's preeminent university system for education America's new majority, represented by students of color, low-income students, first-generation students and adults looking for new opportunities. From San Diego in the south to Humboldt, 800 miles to the north, our universities are places where students discover their passions, form their dreams and strive to get every ounce out of an educational journey of a lifetime.

I always advise people to remain open to opportunities, whether they are just starting out in their careers or they're industry veterans. You never know where you'll find a new prospect or passion. When you least expect it, a new, exciting and meaningful opportunity may be waiting for you—right around the corner. And I am the beneficiary of just that.

After 40-plus years as a producer and director in a career that has exceeded my grandest dreams, I now serve as the first Asian American chair of the CSU Board of Trustees. When I say that this is the greatest honor and privilege of my life—​helping to advance the CSU's mission to elevate lives and communities through higher educationI truly mean it. It is an opportunity and a position that I never would have ever envisioned for myself, and I am so grateful.

Helping the CSU's remarkable studentsCalifornia's diverse and highly educated workforce of the futureto envision and pursue their dreams and new opportunities is what keeps me constantly inspired.

The CSU places high importance on diversity, equity and inclusion. Why are these values important in higher education and how do you ensure that the CSU is an inclusive environment for students from all backgrounds?

At the CSU, diversity and inclusion are in our DNA. We foster an inclusive climate so that all individuals are respected and feel an authentic sense of belonging. College isn't just about gaining knowledge and real-world experience. It's also about feeling like you belongand making lifelong friends along the way. No matter your ethnicity, identity, background​ or interests, a welcoming environment awaits you at the CSU.

I know what it's like to feel alone, the first, the only. From the very start of my career, I had to cut my own professional path, and I sometimes struggled. I was often the only woman and the only person of color in the room. I like to say I've had two parallel careersone in entertainment and one in diversity and inclusion. As I climbed the professional ladder, I always looked for opportunities and ways to support othersespecially women and people of colorso they didn't have to struggle. I did this because representation is important. It matters in entertainment; it matters in higher education; and it matters in every facet of life.

That commitment followed me into higher education. While my professional pursuitsand helping others along the way​have been rewarding, my ultimate honor is serving on the Board of Trustees of the CSU, where the nation's most economically and ethnically diverse student body has access to an affordable, high-quality education that will forever change their lives, elevate their families and communities and change our world.


​Jose Antonio Vargas

​Jose Antonio Vargas
Member, CSU Board of Trustees

How does your unique APIDA heritage and your lived experiences shape your leadership style?

I come from a family of gamblers. My Lolo (grandfather) gambled on a better future when he immigrated to California from the Phillipines, and he later gambled on my future when he decided that I should come to America at 12 years old to live with him. We are not afraid to make bold moves for what we see as the better good. Moreover, being an undocumented immigrant means making things work by any means necessary. No option is invalid to me.

How do you use your leadership platform to inspire and empower students, faculty and staff to dream big and pursue their goals? What inspires you to do this important work, day in and day out?

After I discovered I was undocumented, I didn't think I could attend college, as state financial aid wasn't an option at the time, and felt defeated. But administrators at my high schoolthe principal, Pat Hyland, and the superintendent, Rich Fischer​were determined to send me to college, going so far as to consider adopting me. Ultimately, they identified a scholarship program that did not ask or care about my immigration status, and I received a four-year scholarship to attend San Francisco State University. I want to use my leadership platform to pay it forward, to empower and allow others to not let their situations hinder them in life.

The CSU places high importance on diversity, equity and inclusion. Why are these values important in higher education and how do you ensure that the CSU is an inclusive environment for students from all backgrounds?

Since coming out as undocumented and starting Define American, a media advocacy organization, I've worked to humanize immigrants in America, to create conditions for policies and politics rooted in human rights. Diversity, equity and inclusion in higher education similarly fosters a culture based on shared values and belonging. And we ensure this happens by carving out as many pathways as possible for students from all background to attend our schools.


Darlene Yee-Melichar

Darlene Yee-Melichar
Faculty Trustee, CSU Board of Trustees

How does your unique APIDA heritage and your lived experiences shape your leadership style?

I am  the oldest of five children raised in a traditional, multi-generational household; my parents and grandparents raised us speaking Chinese. Thanks to an outstanding public-school education, I learned English as a second language and later qualified for admission to the Bronx High School of Science, a specialized public high school initially for boys only. Gender equity was still an issue 50 years ago when I attended high school. I was just expected to graduate, get a job and marry; however, with family support, financial aid, scholarships and a work-study job, I was able to attend Barnard Collegea women's collegewhere girls were exposed to amazing role models and excellent support in building confidence and competency skills.

I was proud to be the first in my family to earn a baccalaureate degree, while also serving as a student government leader. Upon graduation and thanks to employee tuition waivers, I earned three graduate degrees, allowing me to nudge the "glass ceiling." I'm proud to have become a tenured full professor with 33 years at San Francisco State, 24 years on San Francisco State's Academic Senate and 18 years on the Academic Senate CSU.

As the first person of color, first Asian American and the first Chinese American to serve as CSU Faculty Trustee, I leverage my leadership efforts by drawing upon my APIDA heritage and lived experiences that shaped me: appreciation for family support and advice from elders, esteem for teaching and learning, high regard for hard work and grit and respect for integrity and resilience. These cultural values and lived experiences informed who I became as a leader and are often reflected in my transformational/servant leadership styles. I often seek input to build consensus, encourage, inspire and motivate teamwork in ways that create meaningful change, and foster an inclusive environment that enables everyone to contribute and become involved.

How do you use your leadership platform to inspire and empower students, faculty and staff to dream big and pursue their goals? What inspires you to do this important work, day in and day out?

My continuing enthusiasm to serve as CSU Faculty Trustee stems from a keen commitment to shared governance in higher education, the structures and processes through which students, faculty, staff, administration and governing boards participate in the development of policies and in decision-making that affect the institution. I believe that we all benefit from the "3 Cs" (communication, consultation and collaboration) and the different perspectives that shared leadership warrants. As CSU Faculty Trustee, I will continue to be committed to the shared interests that our campus and system constituents collectively represent. I am a good listener and will build bridges whenever possible. I work well as a team member. I believe in consultation, collaboration and partnership on important concerns and issues facing public higher education and affecting our students, faculty and staff.

In order to inspire and empower students, faculty and staff, I will proudly assert that the CSU degree is a public good, that it is an excellent investment of public funds and that it benefits and uplifts our communities. I will be unyielding in my support of high-quality and innovative education that is accessible, affordable and eliminates equity gaps so that our distinctive system of public higher education can excel and thrive. I will commend our students, faculty and staff who bring different expertise and experiences to their roles as learners and educators, and uphold a diversity of scholarly interests, viewpoints, learning and teaching styles. By harnessing the collective expertise and experiences of our diverse community members, everyone may be inspired and empowered with fresh perspectives and creative new ways of dreaming big and pursuing their goals.

The CSU places high importance on diversity, equity and inclusion. Why are these values important in higher education and how do you ensure that the CSU is an inclusive environment for students from all backgrounds?

Diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) are core values important in higher education and significant to the CSU's mission. While diversity allows for different voices, equity provides equal access and inclusion fosters a sense of value and empowerment. I have worked hard to prioritize DEI in my personal and professional life. As a first-generation college graduatethe first in my immediate family to earn a college degreeI discovered early on the important skills of empathy, listening, watching and being inclusive of others with different life and work experiences. As an educator, I mentor and teach numerous students about aging, diversity and health/health care disparities. As an active faculty leader at the campus and system levels, I support curricula and research that advance DEI through academic policies, curriculum proposals and senate resolutions.

To ensure that the CSU is an inclusive environment for students from all backgrounds, I believe that we can better promote diversity among our faculty, staff and administrators who resemble them and provide welcoming campus/classroom environments and campus/system programs and resources for all students, regardless of race, ethnicity, age, sex, gender, sexual orientation, ability and socioeconomic status. We can also foster an inclusive enviroment for our underrepresented students through the Educational Opportunity Program, which offers admission, academic and financial support services, and through the ​​​CSU's Graduation Initiative 2025, which seeks to close academic equity gaps and reduce the length of time it takes for students to graduate. ​


The CSU partners with APIDA communities to increase the college preparation, enrollment and graduation rates of those students across the state of Ca​lifornia. Learn more a​bout these efforts.

 
5/2/2024