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Campus & Community

Workshops Engage Faculty on Skills and Strategies for Inclusive Teaching

Tuesday, September 11, 2018, By Carol Boll
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As students returned to campus this fall, more than 300 黑料不打烊 faculty engaged in learning exercises of their own as participants in workshops designed to enhance self-awareness, detect and respond to unconscious bias, and strengthen their skills for more inclusive classrooms, labs, studios, and field experiences.

The three-hour workshops鈥攖itled Inclusive Teaching in the Classroom and Beyond鈥攚ere organized as part of the First-Year Experience Initiative and engaged a total of 327 instructors over six workshops conducted between August 16-24. Designed and created by faculty for faculty, and built using materials crowdsourced from 黑料不打烊 colleagues, the workshops are fast-paced and highly interactive.

The workshops originally were developed to coach instructors of anchor courses on the use of inclusive teaching practices in order to prepare them to effectively address the diverse needs and abilities of first-year undergraduate students. Participation expanded when the Newhouse School and the College of Visual and Performing Arts requested that all full-time faculty in their schools participate.

鈥淭he outcomes we wanted to achieve with these sessions were fivefold,鈥 says Jeff Mangram, associate professor in the School of Education, who co-led the workshops with Marie Garland, executive director of the University鈥檚 Center for Faculty Leadership and Professional Development in the Office of Academic Affairs. 鈥淲e wanted participants to 1) understand the complicated nature of our own identities in shaping how we make sense of the world; 2) appreciate how our identities impact learning as well as how our everyday interactions shape the identities of others, especially our students; 3) explain how contexts and events鈥攍ocal, national, international鈥攊mpact our identities and must be engaged; 4) develop skills to increase inclusivity and equity, including identifying and engaging microaggressions that occur in our daily interactions with each other; and 5) identify and commit to using inclusive pedagogies in the classroom space.鈥

Mangram says the key takeaway, from his perspective, was for faculty to gain a better understanding of how an individual鈥檚 multiple, intersecting identities shape how they make sense, or hamper their capacity to make sense, of the world. 鈥淭hese identities we have of ourselves both inform us as well as create blinders to our experiences with others,鈥 Mangram says. 鈥淎nd we make sense of ourselves, somewhat, based on how others respond to us.鈥

Workshops were interactive, with participants engaging in small-group activities and exercises. One such exercise asked participants to examine their own identities, 聽individually breaking down the different ways they see in themselves鈥攕uch as through gender, ethnicity, political or religious affiliation鈥攁nd then compared those self-perceptions to how others said they viewed them.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a way of understanding how you see yourself as well as how others see you,鈥 says Kira Reed, who co-chairs the First-Year Experience Initiative steering committee. 鈥淎nd it鈥檚 about understanding that our identities are context based. Being aware of that is an important way to open up discussion.鈥

Martha Diede, director of the University鈥檚 new Center for Teaching and Learning Excellence, also in the Office of Academic Affairs, agrees. 鈥淭he first steps in any diversity effort involve looking at oneself, observing what one notices, and thinking about why,鈥 says Diede, who also helped facilitate the workshops. 鈥淥verall, faculty responded positively to these activities, and many said the workshop helped them to process more deeply what it would mean to be inclusive in their classroom.鈥

Workshop participants also watched a video illustrating a potential 鈥渉ot moment鈥 in the classroom鈥攂ehaviors that create obstacles to equity and inclusion鈥攁nd discussed how instructors might appropriately respond. The video prompt鈥攑art of a collection titled 鈥淎nd nobody said anything: Uncomfortable conversations about diversity鈥濃攚as previously created by 黑料不打烊 professors Mara Sapon-Shevin of the School of Education and Richard Breyer of the Newhouse School.

Discussion also addressed concepts of bias; behaviors that can lead some to feel disrespected and/or their experiences diminished; the concept of stereotype threat; and strategies for fostering a positive learning climate.

鈥淢any faculty expressed some relief in that the workshops provided them with practical strategies that can be applied in the classroom,鈥 says Mangram. 鈥淭hey also appreciated having a space in which they could talk about some of the complicated issues they face in their classrooms and in their lives every day.鈥

Organizers say the workshop is not intended as a one-and-done learning opportunity but rather one step among many that are needed in order to move the University toward becoming a more inclusive and diverse campus community. 鈥淏ecause every person enters the work of inclusion from a different vantage point and with different experiences to bring to the table, this is not a one-time effort,鈥 says Diede. 鈥淩ather, these workshops are the beginning of a concerted effort on the part of the University community to become more inclusive. As inclusion professionals will tell you鈥攖he work of inclusion is never fully completed.鈥

For school and college deans who want more information on the Inclusive Teaching workshops and how to schedule one, contact Cathryn Newton, special advisor to the Chancellor and provost for faculty engagement, at provost@syr.edu.

  • Author

Carol Boll

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