Image of several young adults walking and picking up items from the ground.

Next Teaching Circle begins Feb 8: Integrating Community Engagement into your Teaching

Join our Circle: Integrating Community Engagement into your Teaching

Welcome Faculty and Friends!

When: Tune in Wednesdays in February and March on Zoom at 1:00 PM EST for a virtual meet-up as this Teaching Circle offers participants an opportunity to share experiences on this important topic. Dates and details below.

Register for Zoom Link and Add to your calendar:
Wednesday, February 8, 2023, 1:00 PM EST
Wednesday, February 22, 2023 1:00 PM EST
Wednesday, March 8, 2022 1:00 PM EST

About: This teaching circle will explore what engaged pedagogy looks like at Clarkson. How does Clarkson interact with the community, and how does community-based learning impact us and our students’ learning? Clarkson University is part of the St. Lawrence County community, but what does that look like? Our faculty engage with the region through our coursework and research in a variety of disciplines. 

In this teaching circle, we will talk with one another about how we might strengthen Clarkson’s ties to the local community, how we might work together to develop a shared vision of community-based work at Clarkson, and how we might support each other as we offer ideas, strategies, and methodologies. 

Image of several young adults walking and picking up items from the ground.

Points of Discussion:

  • frameworks for service (eg. critical, social justice, liberatory)
  • foci of service (eg. disciplinary skills, project-based skills, research skills, solidarity/interpersonal skills)
  • community partners (How do we form and sustain positive and equity-based partnerships?)
  • reflection and assessment (How do we do that?)
  • our commonalities, differences, and shared vision of community-engaged learning at Clarkson

About Teaching Circles: 

Teaching circles are intentional communities at Clarkson who share concerns and interests related to teaching. They are safe spaces in which colleagues (1) generate and share developments related to teaching, (2) ideate innovations or interventions designed to enhance student learning, (3) seek scholarly research and resources to inform and support implementation of trials. 

Suggest a circle topic or start your own: Our aim is to grow the number of circles based on topics and interest from within the Clarkson community. You can help shape this program with your willingness to get involved. Suggest a topic, facilitate a circle or contribute suggestions. More on this in Moodle.

When applicable, teaching circles will contribute to Clarkson’s greater community of teaching and learning through presentations/publication of findings to colleagues. 

Teaching Circles are coordinated by the Faculty Support and Development Task Force. Participation is open to any faculty, staff, and graduate teaching assistants.

What to expect:

  1. Each circle will be theme or topic focused and is guided by a facilitator or co-facilitators. Facilitators are responsible for organizing circle meetings, posting to circle’s online forum, circle goal setting & check ins, facilitate discussions, arranging for outside expertise (speakers, guest contributors, etc) and encouraging members to contribute fully.  Facilitators volunteer in this leadership role for professional development and exploration of topics of interest. 
  1. Circle Rules:
  • Join as many circles as you like
  • Drop out of a circle at any time
  • Participate actively  
  • Be respectful and inclusive
  1. Teaching circle members will engage in active discussion and contribution is encouraged. Circles meet via Zoom for bi-weekly discussions and will have a home in a Moodle course, as a platform for hosting/sharing resources, facilitating online discussion.

Have an idea for a Teaching Circle? Great! Contact Alexander Cohen (acohen@clarkson.edu), Associate Director of Faculty Support, to pitch your idea.

Facilitators are required to:

  • Hold meetings in a way that allows attendance and participation from all campuses. If Zoom is not appropriate, producing a recording is.
  • Ensure that attendance is logged. This is easily automated through Zoom logs, but alternate means are acceptable if Zoom is not utilized.
  • Create, in collaboration with Alexander Cohen or Laura Perry, a standing section on the Teaching Circles Moodle site to provide an archive of programming and a forum for ongoing discussion and collaboration.

Facilitators are encouraged to:

  • Post to circle’s forum a greeting, and introduction
  • Other suggested posts: relevant experience on the topic, resource review, questions for circle to explore, and comments of interest on the topic
  • Moderate forum discussion

How to Join Teaching Circles:

Click to enroll in the Teaching Circles course in Moodle and complete the Choose a Teaching Circle activity.  

For questions, contact a Faculty Support and Development Task Force:
Alexander Cohen, acohen@clarkson.edu
Kathleen Kavanagh, kkavanag@clarkson.edu
Laura Perry, lperry@clarkson.edu
Christopher Robinson, crobinso@clarkson.edu
Erin Blauvelt, eblauvel@clarkson.edu
Tom Langen, tlangen@clarkson.edu
Kathleen Issen, kissen@clarkson.edu
Loretta Driskel, ldriskel@clarkson.edu
Jan DeWaters, jdewater@clarkson.edu

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