By Jessica Halliday, Gowrie NSW Early Learning Centres (AMEP) Assistant Manager
I have a strong passion and interest in humanitarian issues and causes with continuous contributions made professionally and personally.
Despite working for seven years directly in Early Education and Care in a variety of Support Care, Teacher's Aide and Educator roles, I feel it wasn't until working in the AMEP program that I fully understood and embraced inclusiveness and diversity. Previously, I felt like I viewed inclusiveness and diversity as practices that I was familiar with but did not hold the same deep passion and value for as I do today. For me, it took being exposed to stories and experiences so vastly different to my own, particularly that of refugees, to make a genuine and stirring impact.
This impact has led me to embrace inclusiveness and diversity wholeheartedly in all
It is a journey that is still developing and one I grow more active with daily. Professionally and personally, I regularly look for meaningful ways to educate myself and promote the inclusion of people of diverse race, ethnicities, gender, sexual orientation, socio-economic status, age, physical abilities, religious beliefs, political belief and ideologies.
This inclusion can be through:
Often, I feel like we complicate inclusion by overthinking it and creating perceptions of how we think it should be, which can often appear tokenistic. However, what we need to do more of, is actively listening to people at the forefront of these diverse groups and acting on how they want inclusion to occur.
Find a Gowrie NSW Professional Development Webinar on Inclusion and Diversity here