Cultural diversity celebrated at OU-HCOM
Food, music, dancing, fashion highlight
annual event
By Richard Heck
Feb. 19, 2009
The world came to OU-HCOM Wednesday with
its annual Multicultural Extravaganza.
The event celebrates the talents and
backgrounds of the university’s most
culturally diverse college.
The noon event, which took place in
Irvine Hall, featured singing, dancing,
poetry readings and a fashion show of
garments from around the world.
“Although this is Black History Month,
we wanted to be more inclusive and
emphasize all the multicultural aspects
of the college,” said Collette
McLemore, assistant director of
multicultural programs. “This event
shows the diversity of our medical
students, and it helps them share and
talk about their differences.”
Minority students make up 27 percent of
OU-HCOM’s current first-year class—up
from 24 percent last year.
OU-HCOM’s
diversity is no accident; it reflects
key priorities of the college’s mission:
“embracing diversity” and “improving the
well-being of underserved populations.”
According to McLemore, OU-HCOM
integrates cultural competency training
and opportunities for minority health
research into its curricula. The college
also offers scholarships and summer
programming to increase access and
success rates for both economically
disadvantaged and underrepresented
minority students.
Catalina Soto, OMS-III,
who helped coordinate the event, said
she wanted to remind her peers of the
positive benefits of attending such a
diverse medical school.
“Cultural understanding should be as
important as clinical knowledge to a
physician,” said Soto, who was born and
raised in Columbia. “I think that a
culturally competent physician has a
strong social conscience, advocates for
every patient, and can intimately
understand and ultimately resolve many
health care disparities that persist in
this nation today.”
After a smorgasbord lunch of foods from
around the world, the Multicultural
Extravaganza began with first-year
medical student Candace Moore singing
the black national anthem, “Lift every
voice and sing.”
OU-HCOM’s Step Team—consisting of
second-year medical students Sherice
Richardson, Liset Estanislao, Samar
Kubba and Virginia Mateo, and
first-year medical students Dominique
Crosby, Vashti Mensah and Candace
Moore—provided a lively
demonstration of stepping, an expressive
dance form created by African-American
fraternities in the 1970s.
Other performances included readings,
songs and dances from places around the
globe, including Russia, Vietnam, the
Middle East and India.
“I enjoy experiencing other cultures, so
this was a nice way to become involved
in showcasing the variety of culture at
the college,” said Mensah, who helped
organize the event. “Everyone had a
great time.”
Proceeds from the event support its
sponsor, the OU-HCOM chapter of the
Student National Medical Association,
which focuses on the needs and concerns
of minority medical students.
Ohio University
Heritage
College of Osteopathic Medicine
Grosvenor Hall, Athens, Ohio 45701 Tel:
740-593-2202