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Student Listening Session Information

鶹Ƶ’s 2025 Student Listening and Feedback Sessions on Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) built on prior student listening sessions conducted in 2023 and 2024. The 2025 format was the same as the format used in 2024, which had been revised slightly based on an evaluation of the 2023 listening sessions. The team received a total of 198 entries, from students attending daytime and evening classes at the Yakima campus, Grandview campus, and Toppenish and Ellensburg Learning Centers, responding to the following questions:

  1. What does diversity, equity, and inclusion mean to you?
  2. Do you know of any ways that YVC is working on improving diversity and inclusion?
  3. What should the college do to promote, demonstrate, and/or increase diversity, equity, and inclusion on campus?
  4. Do you feel as though you belong at YVC? Do you feel a sense of belonging? If NO, what prevents you from feeling as though you belong? If YES, what helps you feel that way. Please be specific.
  5. Have you experienced or witnessed prejudice or discrimination at YVC? If yes and you feel comfortable sharing, please explain.
  6. What types of events/workshops around diversity, equity, and inclusion would you like to see offered at YVC?

The team collected no identifying information from students so that they would feel completely comfortable regarding their anonymity.

In general, the student responses reveal a spectrum of understanding about diversity, equity, and inclusion concepts. While some students provided simplistic or limited definitions, others demonstrated nuanced comprehension of how these principles operate in educational and social contexts. Many responses reflected personal connections to DEI concepts, particularly regarding how these principles affect students' sense of fit in and representation on campus. Responses suggest that students primarily associate DEI with acceptance, equal rights and opportunities, freedom of expression, cultural representation, and fairness. Campus-specific references suggest that institutional DEI efforts may be visible and meaningful to students, though knowledge gaps indicate opportunities for further education and awareness-building.

Survey Results