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Expanded Educator Resources

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Expanded Educator Resources

Educators interested in:
professional development opportunities & resources; inclusive teaching & pedagogy; faculty rights & responsibilities; course design; and supporting students should start here!

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Posted by
Makena Neal

{"id"=>4248, "level_no"=>1, "level_title"=>"Inclusive Teaching & Pedagogy", "notes"=>"<span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Educators who are interested in incorporating practices that help the learning environments they build be equitable and inclusive... start with these resources!</span><em><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"><br /><br />Are you new to the #iteachmsu Commons? </span></em><a href=\"../../pathways/99/playlist\"><em><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Start here</span></em></a>", "challenge_id"=>287, "created_at"=>Mon, 30 Jun 2025 15:02:29.110847000 UTC +00:00, "updated_at"=>Mon, 30 Jun 2025 15:02:29.110847000 UTC +00:00}

  • Playlist Sections
  • Inclusive Teaching & Pedagogy
  • Faculty Rights & Responsibilities
  • Course Design
  • Supporting Students

Description

Educators who are interested in incorporating practices that help the learning environments they build be equitable and inclusive... start with these resources!

Are you new to the #iteachmsu Commons?
Start here
DID YOU KNOW... Information on the University’s Anti-Discrimination Policy and how to file a complaint regarding discrimination and/or harassment can be found at: http://www.oie.msu.edu/
Inclusive Pedagogy Overview
Research shows that diversity makes us smarter. Designing an inclusive classroom that allows students to share differing opinions in a brave space where people are treated with dignity can result in good learning outcomes for all. Conflict is a natural part of learning, and differences of opinion expressed in appropriate ways allow everyone to grow. An inclusive classroom allows the instructor to manage conflict in a way that harnesses differences so that they serve as learning opportunities for all. Click the attachment below for some key elements to consider when designing an inclusive classroom. SOURCE: MSU Office for Inclusion and Intercultural Initiatives
DEI & Student Belonging
Setting Participant Guidelines
Classroom Norms & Management (Fall 2024)
Kicking off your course with a Community Building Circle
Dialogue is a specific form of communication that encourages people with differing ideas to build meaningful relationships across difference through building generous and empathetic listening skills. Dialogue is about adding to the common pool of knowledge. Dr. Harold Saunders of the Dialogue Institute says “Dialogue is a process of genuine interaction through which human beings listen to each other deeply enough to be changed by what they learn." Click the attachment below to read more about the goals of dialogue (and how it is different from debate and discussion). SOURCE: MSU Office for Inclusion and Intercultural Initiatives
Intercultural dialogue facilitation is a science and an art. Facilitators are the single most important determinant of successful dialogue outcome. They are the engines that drive the experience to produce meaningful interaction among participants within and across groups. Click the attachment below for more information on facilitating intercultural dialogue in practice. SOURCE: MSU Office for Inclusion and Intercultural Initiatives
Classroom Specific DEI Recommendations
Inclusivity in the Classroom
Oppression is the denial of access to material resources and social power. Oppression can be covert or overt. It is important to be able to identify and name the types of oppression to be able to transcend them. Oppression can manifest in four distinct ways. Click the attachment to learn more! SOURCE: MSU Office for Inclusion and Intercultural Initiatives
MSU Resources on Civility and Community Enhancement in Academic Environments
Have you heard of "THE PALS APPROACH"? PALS is a methodology to use when you hear someone say something that may be problematic or hurtful to a specific group of people or yourself. The major objective of this approach is to stay connected with the person and speak your truth clearly. Click the attachment below for a full description of P.A.L.S. SOURCE: MSU Office for Inclusion and Intercultural Initiatives
Five strategies to address inappropriate comments and offensive remarks with students
According to Derald Wing Sue, “microaggressions are every day encounters of subtle discrimination that people of various marginalized identities experience throughout their lives.” They are often subtle and unintentional and the person who commits a microaggression is often unaware they have hurt someone. Nonetheless, the accumulated impact of daily microaggressions cause real pain, anxiety, depression, self doubt and may even have adverse health impacts on the recipients. To learn more about microaggressions, click the attachment below. SOURCE: MSU Office for Inclusion and Intercultural Initiatives
Adding Pronouns to Common MSU Tools
Why Won't They Talk? Building an Inclusive (and even, on-line) Classroom for Multilingual Learners
An Introduction to "Teaching Multilingual Learners: An Introduction to Translingual Pedagogy"
Best Fit: 4 Reasons to Use Universal Design for Learning (UDL)
Cultivating Inclusive Classrooms: Toward Linguistic Inclusion
Centering Intersectionality in Inclusive Pedagogy
LEAD - Digital Access & Inclusion
Course Accessibility: Commitments, Support, and Resources
Respecting Blind Spartans: Interacting In and After Class
Respecting Blind Spartans: Giving Directions

Description

from teaching responsibilities to academic integrity, syllabi to university policy...
Faculty Rights and Responsibilities 
Instructor Systems & Resources
Code of Teaching Responsibility
Syllabi at MSU
The What and Why of a Syllabus
MSU Attendance Policy
Important Syllabus Statements: Emergencies
Optional Syllabus Statements: Inclusion
Mandatory Reporting & Sample Syllabus Statement
10 Tips for Building a Culture of Civility in the Classroom
What is cheating and how do I define it?
Putting Policy Into Practice: A Federal Educational Rights & Privacy Act (Student Privacy) Tip Sheet
Putting Policy Into Practice: A Web Accessibility Policy Tip Sheet
Putting Policy Into Practice: A Relationship Violence & Sexual Misconduct Policy (RVSM) Tip Sheet

Description

designing a course takes thought and intention
Enduring Understanding
Course Content: What makes the cut
Information on Backward Design from SOIREE
Course Alignment
Writing Measurable Outcomes for Students from SOIREE
Assessment of Student Learning: Best Practices and Techniques
Encouraging Active Learning Environments: Simple Methods for Practice
Trauma Informed Teaching Strategies
Lighten Your Load: Designing Semester and Feedback Plans
Building Community & Connection in Your Context from SOIREE
Creating a Climate of Integrity in Your Classroom
3 Ways to Empower Students and Encourage Them to Take Ownership of Their Learning
Importance of Inclusion and Student Voices in Online Instruction
Grading & Giving Feedback

Description

Are you worried about a student? (playlist)
In addition to referring students to CAPS directly, MSU offers resources for helping a student you have concerns about. This playlist has been developed to make finding those resources easy.

Student Success Contacts and Resources (playlist)
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.
Crisis Procedures and Resources
Recommended teaching, learning, and student success resources
Supporting Student Basic Needs
Mental health (trauma, stress, grief, etc.)
Advocating for Fairness and Partnering with the Ombudsperson's Office for Student Success
The Three “P’s” of Academic Integrity
Academics
Identity
Isolation

Submission: Experience summary

Write a paragraph about what you learned.




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