Teaching about whiteness, gender, or intersectional inequality in higher education? Consider this interview with public sociologist extraordinaire, Tressie McMillan Cottom, on the #BamaRush phenomenon or her NYT op-ed on the enduring power of blond.
Teaching about whiteness, gender, or intersectional inequality in higher education? Consider this interview with public sociologist extraordinaire, Tressie McMillan Cottom, on the #BamaRush phenomenon or her NYT op-ed on the enduring power of blond.
Use this resource based on "Teenage" documentary and the New York Times “Teenage Bill of Rights” (1945) to help students analyze adolescence as a socially constructed life stage.
In the midst of censoring educators to teach right version of U.S. history, settler colonialism deems unpleasant. Nonetheless, the phenomenon is ongoing and we can draw from Indigenous scholars and Native Nations. See this syllabus on TRAILS.
As much as we want to see a university as a neutral space for all students, it's probably a more "Racialized Space" than you might think it is. See this activity for teaching about race and space in higher education.
We try our best to be inclusive to all students. Let's explore this LinkedIn blog post on "Curricular Barriers That Harm Neurodivergent Students of Color."
It's all about Florida: teaching systemic inequality but not sure if the course contents follow the state laws? Better check this 'state-approved' sanitized sociology textbook out!
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