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Home > About > Diversity & Inclusiveness
Diversity & Inclusiveness at MHC
At Mount Holyoke College we don’t just talk about diversity. We live
it. As an institution, we embrace our mission “to educate a diverse
community of women at the highest level of academic excellence.”
Faculty, staff, and students are committed to an inclusive approach
that supports, educates, and nurtures the identity differences of
everyone in our community.
With students from 48 states and nearly 70 countries, ours is a
truly multicultural community. One in every three Mount Holyoke
students is an international citizen or African American, Asian
American, Latina, Native American, or multiracial. Mount Holyoke’s
faculty and staff speak 43 languages. In all disciplines, you’ll find
courses that incorporate a diversity of perspectives. The McCulloch Center for Global Initiatives complements these offerings with programs that weave engagement with a global world into campus life.
As a community, Mount Holyoke recognizes that diversity enhances our
lives while helping us understand more fully the socio-political world
in which we live and preparing us to seek global, environmental
solutions and social justice. Mount Holyoke has become a national
leader in creating and sustaining diversity because we value
inclusiveness. Inclusiveness for us is active engagement in recognizing
and supporting group and individual differences including race,
ethnicity, economic class, sexual orientation, gender, physical
ableism, learning style, religion, and political affiliation.
Students can choose to participate in a range of student-run organizations
that explore world cultures and traditions, political ideologies and
activism, religions, the lesbian gay bisexual transgender community,
and a host of other interests. In addition, Mount Holyoke hosts five cultural centers, as well as a Japanese teahouse and meditation garden. Eliot House,
the College’s home for religious and spiritual activity, actively
supports nine different faith groups and serves as a base for others. For a deeper look at these issues, see the Community Report on Diversity and Inclusiveness.
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