Because the outcomes of equity, inclusion, and anti-oppression deeply affect people’s lives, sometimes it can feel like training people on the subject is about changing their core beliefs and perspectives. Treating it instead as capacity-building for the right behaviours and practices can feel more realistic. Like any other workplace skill set, training and development on equity, inclusion and anti-oppression is not a nice-to-have, but a critical investment in creating shared language, understanding, and action.
Use the goals you’ve set and equity-focused competencies to guide what comes first in your training and development plan. Factors may include:
Topics that nonprofits commonly cover first include:
1. Systems of oppression and privilege: Educate employees to understand and challenge the systems of oppression that affect marginalized communities. A robust curriculum on systems of oppression will include time devoted to understanding the role of social and systemic privilege as well. You may like to start with the systems affecting those who are most represented in your program’s clients or among your workforce.
Example: When arranging for training on racism, ensure a section devoted to understanding white supremacy and its relationship to upholding racism.
2. Intersectionality is the idea that a person’s identities, like their race, gender and ability, combine to shape their experiences. Understanding the common challenges that people with certain combinations of identities face helps you build better systems and programs that support them.
Example: Studies show that women earn less than men, averaging 77 cents for every dollar a man earns. However, the gap widens when race is considered: white women earn 83%, while Black women earn just 59% of what white men make.
3. Indigenous rights, truth and reconciliation, and decolonization: Educate employees on colonization and its historical and ongoing impacts on Indigenous people, and how to redress these wrongdoings today through their work. Recognizing the Indigenous right to self-determination supports employees to work towards a safer, more inclusive workplace for Indigenous colleagues and community members.
Specific topics may include:
4. Cultural safety: Employees learn how to create a culturally safe workplace for Indigenous and racialized colleagues. Having cultural sensitivity, safety, and humility training to begin accepting different ways of working, particularly Indigenous ways of working and knowing. Employees learn about the traits of dominant Canadian society, including white supremacy, and how these are unconsciously considered the norm and standard. Trainings offered by:
Indigenous Corporate Training
San’yas
Indigenous Inclusion
5. Anti-Blackness and anti-racism: Black people in Canada continue to face the lasting impacts of slavery, segregation and discrimination today in the form of anti-Black racism. Understanding how anti-Black racism manifests and how to challenge it equips employees to create a safer, more inclusive workplace for Black colleagues and community members.
6. Behaving inclusively at work: Equipping employees with the knowledge and tools to communicate respectfully and inclusively at work fosters belonging and psychological safety for everyone. Inclusive behaviour includes the ability to identify and even address subtle or unintentional acts of discrimination in daily workplace interactions. Training should include understanding concepts like:
7. Mitigating unconscious bias at work. Unlearning unconscious biases is a gradual process that can take months or years. Unconscious bias training is more effective when it includes techniques for mitigating bias in workplace systems and practices. Current evidence suggests that unconscious bias training alone has limited impact on improving outcomes for underrepresented groups. In some cases, such training can even backfire and unintentionally reinforce stereotypes instead.
Imagine Canada’s 2023 report cites leadership support as one of the most common enablers of equity and inclusion policies and practices. Supporting decision-makers and those with the power to influence policy to understand what equitable and inclusive systems look like, and how to change them, will enable them to more meaningfully participate in equity working groups and manage their teams.
Leaders and decision-makers include:
Leadership-specific training and development topics:
As you identify topics for training and development, you’ll want to consider a few details:
Mandatory or optional?
Making equity training mandatory communicates that it’s a critical skillset. Rather than focusing on changing people’s personal beliefs, treat equity training as a way to clarify the behaviours you expect from employees and why those behaviours matter. Connect the why to broader organizational goals, such as reducing burnout, promoting psychological safety and supporting employee well-being.
Many organizations designate a core set of mandatory training for all employees, that is then complemented by additional resources that employees can explore at their own pace.
Accommodations and exceptions
Equity training often touches on subjects that bring up discomfort, grief and trauma – particularly for employees who are from communities directly affected by the subject. Arrange for extra support and work with employees to accommodate their needs.
Some common supports and accommodations include:
Frequency and scheduling
Practitioners often book up quickly during relevant occasions. Ensure you book ahead as much as possible. Or announce the session during the relevant occasion, with the training booked for a future date.
Continuity
When booking, ensure you are allowed to record and archive the training session. Ensure these are available to new employees during onboarding.
Mentorship programs that focus on opening doors for employees to new opportunities have an important role to play in workplace equity and inclusion. Studies show that formal mentorship programs are beneficial for women and racialized people at work, as white men have an easier time finding mentors through informal channels.
Start an equity-focused mentorship program at your organization by: