Over the pasttwo and a half years, the Office of Diversity, Equity and Community Engagement (ODECE) has hosted nationally renowned inclusive pedagogy experts for an ongoing Inclusive Pedagogy Workshop Series.
Two days ofworkshops on Oct. 15-16in UMC 415 and417 will serve as a showcase for the series, featuring many of the experts who have previously spoken on campus before.
New to the series is Gwendolyn Dungy,who served as executive director of the National Association of Student Personnel Administrators (NASPA) from 1995–2012 and whois a senior fellow at the Association of AmericanColleges and Universities (AAC&U) in the Office of Diversity, Equity, and StudentSuccess.
Returning experts include:
- George Kuh, founding director, senior scholar and co-principal investigator at the National Institute for Learning Outcomes Assessment
- Saundra McGuire, director emerita of the Center for Academic Success at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge
- Ashley Finley, senior advisor to the president and vice president of strategic planning and partnerships, Office of the President, AAC&U
- Thomas Nelson Laird, associate professor in the Higher Education and Student Affairs Program and director of the Center for Postsecondary Research at Indiana University Bloomington, who directs the Faculty Survey of Student Engagement, a companion project to the National Survey of Student Engagement,and helps lead the VALUE Institute, a project aimed at the assessment of authentic student work.
The opening plenary session, on Oct. 15from 8:30–10 a.m., is a panel titled “Inclusive Pedagogy as Opportunities for Innovation” featuring Provost Russ Moore and the founding directorfor the Center for Teaching and Learning, Kirk Ambrose, in addition to Gwendolyn Dungy and Alma Clayton-Pedersen. The panelists will discuss the central role that inclusive pedagogy plays in teaching excellence and student learning outcomes, and how it will be an increasingly vital element of teaching and learning well into the future.
On Oct. 15from 1–2:30 p.m. is a session titled “Becoming a Resilient Practitioner of Inclusive Pedagogy,” designed to address some of the challenges the community has faced in implementing inclusive pedagogies and offer new strategies for newcomers to the discussion.
On Oct. 16from 8:30–10:30 a.m. is the final workshop, titled “Inclusive Pedagogy: The Way Forward,” which is designed to split into two sub-sessions, focused on implementation and assessment, respectively, whilecommenting on the current state of inclusive pedagogy and the scholarship on teaching and learning practices.
All faculty, students and staff are welcome to attend the workshops; pleaseRSVP on the ODECE website.