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Teaching Social Action

Oregon ‘25 Institute on Teaching Social Action

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This two-day, in-person institute at Portland State University will introduce faculty and staff to an experiential learning approach for incorporating social action campaigns into either a semester-long course or co-curricular workshop series. In this transformative experiential learning model, students develop and launch a social action campaign of their choosing during the semester the course is taught. The student campaigns seek to change a rule, regulation, norm, or practice of an institution, whether on campus or in the community.

Our long-term goal is to mainstream this model for teaching active democracy. The world needs more citizens who have developed their knowledge and skills in bringing about positive change through real world experience.

Note: we ask that attendees fully participate in our community of practice by making the following commitments.

Institute Host

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Sally Eck

Assistant Professor of Teaching

Women, Gender and Sexuality Studies Department

Portland State University

Institute Participants (Accepted To Date)

Grand Challenges in Science and Engineering I
Grand Challenges in Science and Engineering I

Ariane Jong-Levinger

Schmid College of Science & Technology

Chapman University

Change Leadership
DSCI 240: Data for Good
DSCI 240: Data for Good

Devin Fitzpatrick

General Education / Data Science

Lewis & Clark College

Change Leadership
First Year Inquiry: Portland
First Year Inquiry: Portland

Leanne Serbulo

University Studies (Interdisciplinary General Education Program)

Portland State University

Change Leadership
N/A
N/A

Venus Ausmus

Student Activities & Leadership Programs

Portland State University

Change Leadership
Interdisciplinary Social Action for Rights to Food and Environment
Interdisciplinary Social Action for Rights to Food and Environment

Neeraja Havaligi

Environmental Sciences Graduate Program

Oregon State University

Environment & Sustainability
Artist as Citizen
Artist as Citizen

Amanda Singer

Music and Theater

Portland State University

Humanities
Power & Imagination
Power & Imagination

Sonja Taylor

University Studies

Portland State University

Humanities
Resistance/Activism/Social Change
Resistance/Activism/Social Change

Molly Benitez

Women, Gender, & Sexuality Studies

Portland State University

Social Science
Education and Justice
Education and Justice

Tracie Meyers

SEEK

John Jay College of Criminal Justice

Social Science
Black Families in the U.S.
Black Families in the U.S.

roberta hunte

School of Social Work

Portland State University

Social Work
Organizing, Activism, Advocacy, Social Action
Organizing, Activism, Advocacy, Social Action

Tozi Gutierrez

Family Studies and Human Services

Portland State University

Social Work

Institute Preparation

During the two-day institute, participants will draft a syllabus and develop a teaching and a plan for supporting student campaigns which are launched mid-semester. The institute sessions will be led by Dr. Scott Myers-Lipton, Professor of Sociology at San Jose State University. We will use a flipped classroom model, where participants will be asked to prepare for sessions by reading two textbooks — CHANGE! A Student Guide to Social Action and CHANGE! A Guide to Teaching Social Action — and reaching CHANGE! A Companion Guide to Teaching Social Action. These resources cover address all aspects of teaching a social action course, including:

  • An Overview of Teaching Social Action
  • Organizing Your Class
  • Issue Development & Choosing Campaigns
  • Change Theory & Building Power
  • Research & Group Dynamics
  • Strategy & Tactics
  • Campaign Kick-Off
  • Campaign Plan & Evaluation
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Participants will work with a syllabus template which includes guiding questions. We will discuss the pros and cons of revising a course to incorporate social action campaigns or develop a new course that complements an existing course, concentration, minor, major, or certificate program. We will also share the process and lessons learned from prior student campaigns. We welcome participants who want to explore developing a co-curricular social action workshop series embedded into a fellowship or co-curricular or integrated program.

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Over the two-days participants will meet each day for discussions about your goals, course models, teaching approach, and sharing examples and exercises that will help you plan your social action course or workshop series.

At the conclusion of the institute, we will invite participants to join a year-long support and networking community of fellow practitioners who are teaching or learning how to teach social action using this experiential, real-world model. The Teaching Social Action Group is hosted by the Bonner Foundation on the Bonner Learning Community Platform to give faculty, staff, and students a forum for asking questions, discussing active student campaigns, sharing successes and challenges, and announcing future opportunities for training, education, and reflection.

Application

There is no registration fee for the Portland State University Institute on Teaching Social Action. However, we want to restrict participation in the institute to those faculty, staff or students who are committed to implementing this experiential social action course model. Please note that preparing and supporting students to launch their social action campaigns generally takes at least half of the course content and assignments. Some courses are directly on social action and change, while others address a societal issue (e.g., climate change, housing, poverty, etc.) around which students develop their campaigns. From experience, the social action campaign dimension of these courses takes up roughly half of the course work (readings, assignments, and in-class teaching and group work).

teachingsocialaction.org