We found 156 results that contain "power"
Posted on: MSU Academic Advising

Basic/Essential Needs Series
This playlist contains video recordings, PowerPoint slides, and handouts from the Basic Needs Series hosted in Spring 2024. As educators, we want every student to have an equal opportunity to learn and thrive. However, many students face significant barriers when their basic needs for food, shelter, clothing, and other necessities go unmet. The presentations in this playlist are meant to assist MSU educators with gaining knowledge and skills to identify and assist students experiencing challenges like poverty, homelessness, or lack of resources.
NAVIGATING CONTEXT
Posted on: #iteachmsu

Student Success Contacts and Resources
This Student Success playlist was created by Jeana-Dee Allen and Joyce Meier, members of the Educators Empowering Student Success Group (facilitated by Mary Beth Heeder and Jeno Rivera), which is working on the Faculty Improving Student Success Strategic Initiative. Each article in this playlist contains a list of resources that promote student success. All links provided are direct links (ONE CLICK) connecting you to contact information or an educator who can respond to your questions and/or help your students. Thank you for helping our students achieve their goals.
If you can not quickly find what you are looking for, please email Mary Beth Heeder, senior consultant and project manager for Student Learning and Success, (heeder@msu.edu) and we will respond within 24 business hours.
If you can not quickly find what you are looking for, please email Mary Beth Heeder, senior consultant and project manager for Student Learning and Success, (heeder@msu.edu) and we will respond within 24 business hours.
NAVIGATING CONTEXT
Posted on: #iteachmsu
Collaborative Oral Exams Power Point
This is a PowerPoint that was shared during an assessment workshop in the summer of 2020 by Dr. Nicola Imbracsio.
Authored by: Nicola Imbracsio
Assessing Learning
Posted on: Spring Conference o...

The Power of Education Abroad: Lessons from Sustainable Community Development in Tanzania
Title: The Power of Education Abroad: Lessons from Sustainable Community Development in TanzaniaPresenters: Jonathan Choti (Department of Linguistics, Languages, and Cultures/CAL)Format: Paper PresentationDate: May 11th, 2023Time: 10:00 am - 11:15 amClick here to viewDescription:Many college students are participating in study abroad programs during their undergraduate studies. The Institute for International Education estimated that 240,000 college students studied abroad in 2006/2007. Kim & Goldstein (2005) established that female students participate in study abroad more frequently than males. Besides, research shows that undergraduate students who study abroad become globally engaged in a variety of ways later. These findings underline the importance of education abroad programs in terms of curricula, pedagogy, student and faculty experiences, outcomes as well as benefits and challenges. This talk will provide more insights about study abroad programs. I will share my six-year experience directing a six-week summer education abroad program known as “Sustainable Community Development in Tanzania”. This talk focuses on the curriculum, pedagogy, benefits, and challenges of the program. This program offers students an opportunity to have a community-engaged and cross-cultural learning experience, learn Swahili, have a home-stay experience, participate in multi-disciplinary experiential research teams, room with Tanzanian students, and work with Tanzanian faculty and locals to address urgent issues in the community. Travelling to a foreign country and experiencing a distant culture while earning academic credits are inherent values of this program. Students develop appreciation for a new culture and critical thinking and other cognitive skills, improve their interpersonal and communication skills, and establish enduring relationships. Consequently, they exhibit a deep sense of intercultural empathy and understanding, participate in the Peace Corp Program, join international and non-profit organizations, and become global citizens, full with global values and engagement patterns.
Authored by: Jonathan Choti
Pedagogical Design
Posted on: #iteachmsu

Mayer’s Principles of Multimedia Learning
Have you ever reviewed someone’s instructional materials and wondered how to gently tell them that, well, they are terrible?
One way to go about it is to reference research and theory, so it isn’t personal. A favorite of mine is Richard Mayer’s Principles of Multimedia Learning. These principles provide a nice way to support the following thoughts:
“So many words on that slide! Visuals, please!”
“Too many ideas on that one slide!”
“Ugh, the busy design, the animations, make them stop!”
“Information overload! Break it up, pare it down!“
“You sound like a stuffy academic instead of the awesome person you are! Keep it informal. Ditch the jargon!”
“Yes, you are very photogenic, but can I please see a visual instead of your face?”
Instructional materials such as videos or PowerPoints can make or break what you teach. Take the time to do them well.
Check out the article How to use Mayer's 12 Principle of Multimedia, which summarizes Mayer’s principles nicely. If you want to go straight to the source, the MSU library has you covered. Check out Mayer's book Multimedia Learning (2009), Cambridge University Press.
One way to go about it is to reference research and theory, so it isn’t personal. A favorite of mine is Richard Mayer’s Principles of Multimedia Learning. These principles provide a nice way to support the following thoughts:
“So many words on that slide! Visuals, please!”
“Too many ideas on that one slide!”
“Ugh, the busy design, the animations, make them stop!”
“Information overload! Break it up, pare it down!“
“You sound like a stuffy academic instead of the awesome person you are! Keep it informal. Ditch the jargon!”
“Yes, you are very photogenic, but can I please see a visual instead of your face?”
Instructional materials such as videos or PowerPoints can make or break what you teach. Take the time to do them well.
Check out the article How to use Mayer's 12 Principle of Multimedia, which summarizes Mayer’s principles nicely. If you want to go straight to the source, the MSU library has you covered. Check out Mayer's book Multimedia Learning (2009), Cambridge University Press.
Posted by: Anne Marie Baker
Pedagogical Design
Posted on: PREP Matrix
Mentor/Trainee Relationship
This resource about the Responsible Conduct of Research discusses the process of identifying mentors and how to have an appropriate mentor/trainee relationship.
Posted by: Admin
Navigating Context
Posted on: PREP Matrix
Animal Research
This resource about Responsible Conduct of Research discusses ethical animal care and how to properly conduct research using animals.
Posted by: Admin
Navigating Context
Posted on: #iteachmsu
An Introduction to Semester-long projects as a version of high impact assessment design
The attached PowerPoint is an overview of semester-long course projects as an option for high-impact assessment design. Author, Andrea Bierema has a joint appointment with the Center for Integrative Studies in General Science and the Department of Integrative Biology. In addition to this position, she teaches during the summer at Kellogg Biological Station. Dr. Bierema’s research spans undergraduate biology education and avian communication.
Dr. Bierema has graciously shared examples from her own courses. You can see examples of assignments, peer review, and discussion boards.
Dr. Bierema has graciously shared examples from her own courses. You can see examples of assignments, peer review, and discussion boards.
Authored by: Andrea Bierema
Assessing Learning
Posted on: #iteachmsu
Building Community Engagement Into Your Course: Ethics and Reflections
Community engagement can be a powerful tool for both connecting classroom learning to real life experiences and supporting community change efforts. In this our last post on community engagement in teaching, we want to address two questions: : 1) How can teachers attend to ethical concerns that may arise throughout community engagement projects?; and 2) How can teachers integrate routine reflection as a strategy to assess student learning throughout community engagement projects? Reflective activities create a critical space for us to capture the ethical issues arising with students and to reflect on our own ethical practice as instructors for community engaged courses. And we could not discuss ethical concerns without students being able to reflect about specific issues. For this last post in our community engagement series, we will focus on the ways we made sure to support student learning by exploring potential ethical issues and creating regular reflective opportunities.
Ethical Considerations When Engaging Communities
The ethical issues you must attend to are both community- and student-focused. Returning to the community engagement spectrum from our previous two posts (Preparation and Implementation), the ethical considerations broaden as students become more immersed in communities. For example, we both had concerns about communities being exploited for the sake of students’ learning. To address this concern, Jenny (service learning) spent time with community partners prior to her course to gain an understanding about what would make the project meaningful to them and built mechanisms into the course to attend to those needs. Katie (photovoice) built guidelines for students’ photos into her photovoice rubric, spent time in class talking to students about ethical photography, and encouraged students to ask questions they may have about their photos.
We both felt it would be unethical for students to engage with communities without first considering the impact their own identities and expectations on their work. We made sure students thought about privileged and oppressed identities, assumptions they hold about communities that they might engage with, and how they might manage or interpret challenging experiences. Overall, we focused students on reflecting as an ethical imperative to ensure the experience worked well for community members and for students, but also as an assessment process to enhance student learning.
Reflection for Learning in Community Engagement
Reflection can be a useful tool for both students and instructors to more fully understand learning during community engagement activities. We both used multiple tools for reflection based in course objectives, both formal and informal, and creatively responding to the unexpected elements of this work. Below, we highlight how you can prepare to incorporate reflection into your community engagement efforts, along with some helpful tips for doing so that we derived from our own work
A) Reflect Flexibly Toward Course Objectives
If you’ve already elected to use community engagement as part of your course, you should consider how it will match up with course objectives. This can be very direct if you’re reading an article or bringing in a speaker about a particular topic, but may require more scaffolding if you’re integrating an experience like photovoice, service learning, or study abroad. Here, it’s essential to anticipate multiple student experiences of community engagement work. Make sure that reflection prompts are broad enough so that all students can participate, but still focused enough they are reflecting back toward the overall project and course objectives. For example, in Katie’s course, she had a full class dedicated to reflection incorporating definitions, examples and an assignment using a reflection tool called the “Ladder of Inference.” These activities taught students how to identify their own learning and thinking changed about particular issues, preparing to do deeper reflection in their photovoice project, and further connecting back to the overall course objectives of examining how concepts of power and oppression relate to social issues.
B) Reflect Informally and Formally
It’s essential to provide a spectrum of ways students can reflect on their learning. This spectrum builds a comprehensive culture of reflection in your course and provides multiple windows into student learning during community engagement and beyond. Providing informal reflection spaces help students build up to more formal, graded reflections on their work. These informal reflections could include short discussions, posing quick questions to students after explaining something, and/or having students keep a journal of their thoughts during community engagement work. And eventually building formal reflection into the course provides a culminating space for student to think about their learning across community engagement experiences. Final papers or projects can provide a powerful picture of what students experienced and continue to validate both the community engagement work and the importance of regular reflection in connection to it. Whatever mixture of formal and informal reflection you decide on, make sure to integrate the results of the student reflection into your instruction moving forward. Through lectures and learning activities, demonstrate you’ve heard and are thinking about what students said.
C) Reflect Creatively
Reflective activities and assignments don’t have to fit within the bounds of traditional assessment strategies. There is plenty of room for creativity in setting up these activities.For example, Katie hosted a photovoice gallery in her classroom where students could explore their peers’ interpretations of the activity. Then, students had the opportunity to engage in discussion to reflect on what they’ve learned as a group from participating in the process. Doing this in both a big group and individually can speak to multiple learning styles. It also provides a space for students to generate new understandings of their experiences.
D) Reflect on the Unexpected
Realize that reflections may go beyond the scope of your course objectives and be prepared to facilitate learning that departs from expected directions. Community engagement can be both messy and beautiful. Leave space for unpacking the complexities.
We hope this series of blog posts helped remove some of the mystique regarding community engagement in the classroom. Getting students to connect course topics to what is going on around them can be rewarding and exciting! As you continue to consider incorporating community engagement into your own work, what ethical concerns do you need to consider? How important is reflection in your course? What reflective activities could you do to prepare your students for engagement and to assess their learning? We are always looking for new ideas so please share with us in the comments below!
Originally posted at “Inside Teaching MSU” (site no longer live): Gregory K. and Lawlor, J. Building Community Engagement into Your Course: Ethics and Reflections. inside teaching.grad.msu.edu
Ethical Considerations When Engaging Communities
The ethical issues you must attend to are both community- and student-focused. Returning to the community engagement spectrum from our previous two posts (Preparation and Implementation), the ethical considerations broaden as students become more immersed in communities. For example, we both had concerns about communities being exploited for the sake of students’ learning. To address this concern, Jenny (service learning) spent time with community partners prior to her course to gain an understanding about what would make the project meaningful to them and built mechanisms into the course to attend to those needs. Katie (photovoice) built guidelines for students’ photos into her photovoice rubric, spent time in class talking to students about ethical photography, and encouraged students to ask questions they may have about their photos.
We both felt it would be unethical for students to engage with communities without first considering the impact their own identities and expectations on their work. We made sure students thought about privileged and oppressed identities, assumptions they hold about communities that they might engage with, and how they might manage or interpret challenging experiences. Overall, we focused students on reflecting as an ethical imperative to ensure the experience worked well for community members and for students, but also as an assessment process to enhance student learning.
Reflection for Learning in Community Engagement
Reflection can be a useful tool for both students and instructors to more fully understand learning during community engagement activities. We both used multiple tools for reflection based in course objectives, both formal and informal, and creatively responding to the unexpected elements of this work. Below, we highlight how you can prepare to incorporate reflection into your community engagement efforts, along with some helpful tips for doing so that we derived from our own work
A) Reflect Flexibly Toward Course Objectives
If you’ve already elected to use community engagement as part of your course, you should consider how it will match up with course objectives. This can be very direct if you’re reading an article or bringing in a speaker about a particular topic, but may require more scaffolding if you’re integrating an experience like photovoice, service learning, or study abroad. Here, it’s essential to anticipate multiple student experiences of community engagement work. Make sure that reflection prompts are broad enough so that all students can participate, but still focused enough they are reflecting back toward the overall project and course objectives. For example, in Katie’s course, she had a full class dedicated to reflection incorporating definitions, examples and an assignment using a reflection tool called the “Ladder of Inference.” These activities taught students how to identify their own learning and thinking changed about particular issues, preparing to do deeper reflection in their photovoice project, and further connecting back to the overall course objectives of examining how concepts of power and oppression relate to social issues.
B) Reflect Informally and Formally
It’s essential to provide a spectrum of ways students can reflect on their learning. This spectrum builds a comprehensive culture of reflection in your course and provides multiple windows into student learning during community engagement and beyond. Providing informal reflection spaces help students build up to more formal, graded reflections on their work. These informal reflections could include short discussions, posing quick questions to students after explaining something, and/or having students keep a journal of their thoughts during community engagement work. And eventually building formal reflection into the course provides a culminating space for student to think about their learning across community engagement experiences. Final papers or projects can provide a powerful picture of what students experienced and continue to validate both the community engagement work and the importance of regular reflection in connection to it. Whatever mixture of formal and informal reflection you decide on, make sure to integrate the results of the student reflection into your instruction moving forward. Through lectures and learning activities, demonstrate you’ve heard and are thinking about what students said.
C) Reflect Creatively
Reflective activities and assignments don’t have to fit within the bounds of traditional assessment strategies. There is plenty of room for creativity in setting up these activities.For example, Katie hosted a photovoice gallery in her classroom where students could explore their peers’ interpretations of the activity. Then, students had the opportunity to engage in discussion to reflect on what they’ve learned as a group from participating in the process. Doing this in both a big group and individually can speak to multiple learning styles. It also provides a space for students to generate new understandings of their experiences.
D) Reflect on the Unexpected
Realize that reflections may go beyond the scope of your course objectives and be prepared to facilitate learning that departs from expected directions. Community engagement can be both messy and beautiful. Leave space for unpacking the complexities.
We hope this series of blog posts helped remove some of the mystique regarding community engagement in the classroom. Getting students to connect course topics to what is going on around them can be rewarding and exciting! As you continue to consider incorporating community engagement into your own work, what ethical concerns do you need to consider? How important is reflection in your course? What reflective activities could you do to prepare your students for engagement and to assess their learning? We are always looking for new ideas so please share with us in the comments below!
Originally posted at “Inside Teaching MSU” (site no longer live): Gregory K. and Lawlor, J. Building Community Engagement into Your Course: Ethics and Reflections. inside teaching.grad.msu.edu
Authored by: K. Gregory and J. Lawlor
Disciplinary Content
Posted on: PREP Matrix
Intro to Responsible Conduct of Research, Scholarship, And Creative Activities
This resource on the Responsible Conduct of Research offers an overview of the ethical expectations and responsibilities for anyone doing research, scholarship, or creative activities at MSU. It emphasizes both the varying responsibilities graduate students have to various individuals (advisor, PI, self, family) and institutions (MSU, grant-funding bodies) as well as the responsibilities those individuals and institutions have to graduate students in pursuit of their scholarship
Posted by: Admin
Navigating Context
Posted on: Power Automate/Apps...
Do you use Copilot in Power Automate? I have only had moderate success with having Copilot outline flows for me, but I have found it useful that I can have Copilot write plain language descriptions of flows I have created. This helps me with a recurring question I have when making a new flow: 'How did I do this the last time?"
Posted by: David V. Howe
Posted on: Power Automate/Apps...
Want to see what Power Apps can do? ICYMI, here is the eye-popping presentation by Christine Nguyen-Koelzer and Eddie Ngyuen-Koelzer on the Apps they have created: https://mediaspace.msu.edu/media/There%27s+An+App+for+ThatA+Leveraging+Microsoft+PowerApps+in+a+University+Setting/1_hjj5tqf6 and attached is their handout that includes some getting started resources. You deserve to view this video.
Posted by: David V. Howe
Posted on: Power Automate/Apps...
Question: do you prefer the new editor or the classic editor in PA?
Posted by: David V. Howe
Posted on: Power Automate/Apps...
Question #2: What is your favorite Power Automate YouTube channel? Chad Randall, who have I have leaned on heavily in my PA education, started me off with Reza Dorrani's channel: https://www.youtube.com/@RezaDorrani/videos
Posted by: David V. Howe
Posted on: CISAH
John Spencer
The Shift from Engaging Students to Empowering Learners -- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BYBJQ5rIFjA&t=13s
10 Ways to Empower Students with Choice -- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L08wNizulOY&t=12s
Empowering Students to Own the Assessment Process -- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8WxvVgXC_NY&t=84s
The New EdTech Classroom
Hybrid Teaching? Use These Programs! -- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n2eASibkQYM&t=66s
In Person and Remote at the Same Time? No Problem! -- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mFRLzQVxa6Q
The Shift from Engaging Students to Empowering Learners -- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BYBJQ5rIFjA&t=13s
10 Ways to Empower Students with Choice -- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L08wNizulOY&t=12s
Empowering Students to Own the Assessment Process -- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8WxvVgXC_NY&t=84s
The New EdTech Classroom
Hybrid Teaching? Use These Programs! -- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n2eASibkQYM&t=66s
In Person and Remote at the Same Time? No Problem! -- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mFRLzQVxa6Q
Posted by: Stokes Schwartz
Pedagogical Design
Posted on: Power Automate/Apps...
The language used in the Power Platform is called Power FX. It takes a lot from excel, so maybe thinking 'excel' as you build flows and apps (and maybe PowerPoint as you build apps), will give you some foundation. Here is a page that describes Power FX: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/power-platform/power-fx/overview
Posted by: David V. Howe
Posted on: Ungrading (a CoP)
Multiple stories and sentiments were generously shared by 4/4 Beyond Buzzwords: Ungrading workshop participants (thank you for your vulnerability and candor) about the varied ways in which students react to, and make assumption / inferences about their instructors, after the employment of ungrading and ungrading-inspired practices.
This article (linked below) "Academe Has a Lot to Learn About How Inclusive Teaching Affects Instructors" By Chavella Pittman and Thomas J. Tobin in The Chronicle of Higher Education on FEBRUARY 7, 2022 will likely be of interest to you. Starting out by recognizing / acknowledging the power held by some identities (core, chosen, and given) but not by others, complicates the idea that all educators have the same "power and authority" to give up/share to increase learners' sense of ownership and agency in the classroom. ""What if you have neither the institutional authority (a full-time or tenure-track job) nor the dominant-culture identity (by virtue of your race, gender, and/or ability) that usually go hand in hand with being treated as a respected, powerful presence in the college classroom?... In urging faculty members to adopt inclusive teaching practices, we need to start asking if they actually can — and at what cost, " say Pittman and Tobin.
Take-aways shared in this piece include:
1. Understand that your classroom choices may unintentionally affect or undercut a colleague
2. Discuss in your department the issue of bias in students' rating of teaching
3. Respect the variability among your colleagues, as well as among your students
4. Find trained help
"Share your stories, experiences, and thought processes as you negotiate your instructor role in the classroom..." iteach.msu.edu is one space where we can continue to help "normalize the conversation about instructor identity and status as a necessary element in the adoption of inclusive design and teaching practices".
https://www.chronicle.com/article/academe-has-a-lot-to-learn-about-how-inclusive-teaching-affects-instructors
This article (linked below) "Academe Has a Lot to Learn About How Inclusive Teaching Affects Instructors" By Chavella Pittman and Thomas J. Tobin in The Chronicle of Higher Education on FEBRUARY 7, 2022 will likely be of interest to you. Starting out by recognizing / acknowledging the power held by some identities (core, chosen, and given) but not by others, complicates the idea that all educators have the same "power and authority" to give up/share to increase learners' sense of ownership and agency in the classroom. ""What if you have neither the institutional authority (a full-time or tenure-track job) nor the dominant-culture identity (by virtue of your race, gender, and/or ability) that usually go hand in hand with being treated as a respected, powerful presence in the college classroom?... In urging faculty members to adopt inclusive teaching practices, we need to start asking if they actually can — and at what cost, " say Pittman and Tobin.
Take-aways shared in this piece include:
1. Understand that your classroom choices may unintentionally affect or undercut a colleague
2. Discuss in your department the issue of bias in students' rating of teaching
3. Respect the variability among your colleagues, as well as among your students
4. Find trained help
"Share your stories, experiences, and thought processes as you negotiate your instructor role in the classroom..." iteach.msu.edu is one space where we can continue to help "normalize the conversation about instructor identity and status as a necessary element in the adoption of inclusive design and teaching practices".
https://www.chronicle.com/article/academe-has-a-lot-to-learn-about-how-inclusive-teaching-affects-instructors
Posted by: Makena Neal
Pedagogical Design
Posted on: Power Automate/Apps...
Hello, current and future users of Microsoft's Power Automate. I made this group so we can share learn more and share our knowledge and skills. I made my first flow about five years ago. It was very simple and I still needed help, despite the fact that Microsoft bills PA as a 'Low-code, No-Code' solution. Only recently have I begun using PA more earnestly. I still need help.
Posted by: David V. Howe
Host: MSU Libraries
MSU Libraries and The Poetry Room present Olivia Gatwood
Join the MSU Libraries and Lansing’s The Poetry Room for an afternoon of poetry, connection and conversation celebrating student, alumni and community voices. The event opens with performances from the MSU Poetry Club alongside recent alumni, spotlighting emerging talent and the power of being heard. The showcase will be followed by acclaimed poet, author and viral sensation Olivia Gatwood, whose work blends humor, intimacy and sharp social insight. Gatwood will share poems as well as excerpts from her 2024 novel “Whoever You Are, Honey,” offering an unfiltered look into her craft and creative journey. The afternoon will conclude with a Q&A — a mix of moderated conversation and audience participation — creating a rare opportunity to connect with one of today’s most dynamic literary voices.
Olivia Gatwood is the author of two poetry collections, “New American Best Friend” and “Life of the Party,” and co-writer of Adele’s music video “I Drink Wine.” She has received international recognition for her poetry, writing workshops and work as a Title IX-compliant educator in sexual assault prevention and recovery. Her performances have been featured on HBO, MTV, VH1, the BBC and more, with poems appearing in “The Poetry Foundation,” “Lambda Literary” and “The Missouri Review.” Originally from Albuquerque, she now lives in Los Angeles.
Event is free and open to all.
Navigating Context
Host: MSU Libraries
Film Screening: I’m Still Here (Ainda estou aqui)
Ainda Estou Aqui (I’m Still Here), winner of the Best International Feature Film at the 97th Academy Awards (2025), tells the powerful true story of Rubens Paiva’s arrest and disappearance in 1970s Rio de Janeiro and his wife Eunice’s relentless fight for the truth amid Brazil’s military dictatorship (1964–1985).
Based on the novel by Marcelo Rubens Paiva—son of Rubens and Eunice—the film portrays the Paiva family’s struggle to uncover Rubens’ fate in a nation gripped by political repression. The trauma of her husband's disappearance drives Eunice to study law, ultimately becoming a leading advocate for Indigenous rights in Brazil.
We invite the MSU community and the general public to a free screening and discussion on political oppression, censorship, fear, trauma, democratic challenges, and social upheaval. Faculty members will facilitate the conversation, encouraging critical engagement with the film’s historical and contemporary relevance.
This event is free and open to the public.
Agenda
5:30 PM: Screening to be presented by Janette Nuñez (MSU Libraries) and Saulo Gouveia (Romance and Classical Studies)
7:45 PM (immediately after the screening): Discussion panel featuring:
a. Peter Beattie, History
b. Saulo Gouveia, Romance and Classical Studies
c. María Isabel Espinoza, Sociology
d. Rocío Quispe Agnoli, Romance and Classical Studies
Navigating Context