This week weâre spotlighting a new blog series on the OpenLab, Pedagogy Profiles. Pedagogy Profiles is an OpenLab blog series that highlights our educators here at City Tech. Each month weâll feature different faculty members who will share the diverse and creative ways they are using the OpenLab to support their pedagogy.
Through a series of questions, educators are asked to reflect on their experiences using the OpenLab to support a range of pedagogy-related activities, from supporting a specific course to coordinating curriculum within a learning community. In their responses, educators discuss specific affordances of the OpenLab and the kind of course structure and culture theyâve been able to realize by integrating the OpenLab into their practice.
Through this series, we hope to give educators a chance to reflect on their pedagogy in a public arena, and to engage other educators in critical and transformative dialogue about teaching and learning. Our hope for Pedagogy Profiles is that it will further enrich the ongoing conversations around pedagogy already taking place at City Tech and across CUNY.
This series is hosted on one of our in-house sites, Open Pedagogy on the OpenLab. This site serves as forum where the City Tech community can ask questions, stimulate discussion, and share teaching materials, resources, and ideas related to teaching and learning on the OpenLab.
To view our latest featured profile, look in the blog or sidebar on our homepage. You can also review past posts by visiting our Archive.
Want to nominate a colleague or professor to be featured? Contact us today!
This week weâre spotlighting the Ink Club, an expanding group of student-illustrators and -artists who are growing community around their love of the craft of storytelling. Accepting students of all levels and experience, the Ink Club offers support and opportunities to collaborate for students who want to develop and hone their craft. Specifically they hold weekly meetings, offer portfolio-building and professional development opportunities (including a visit with the full-service animation company Titmouse, evidenced by image below), and house a curated a set of resources on their site.
Recently, the group has been working on an anthology zine, a book of illustrations and short comics arranged around the theme of âZodiacâ. Copies of the zine will be printed for contributing members and sold at future events to raise funds for and share the work of the group. Relatedly, the group tabled this past weekend at the MoCCA Fest (Manhattan’s largest independent comics, cartoon and animation festival), where they showcased their anthology and the members sold pieces of their artwork.
Interested? Drop by or get in touch. The group âtypically meet[s] every Thursday, at 12:45-2:15pm, in room Namm 1122.â Or, if you have questions, contact them (citytechinkclub [at] gmail [dot] com).
Just a fan? View their gallery, subscribe to their site (click âJoin Nowâ under the avatar or profile image on their OpenLab profile and/or follow them on social media (Instagram, Facebook).
As youâll read in their bios, each blogger brings their own experiences and unique flavor to their writing and the selection of stories they tell: Sabrina brings life and analysis to the Cityâs architecture, while Neffi offers advice and strategies for success, for example. The group has also tackled topics together by identifying a common writing theme for the week or month. In the past, the team took on the challenge of unpacking topics like what the practice of writing means to them. This week, the all-girl cast is celebrating Womenâs History Month with posts honoring the important women and positions on feminism that they admire and aspire to embody.
Through their posts (so far!), these women have acknowledged the important work of a range of women spanning history – from Beyonce and Michelle Obama to Sojourner Truth and Coretta Scott King (coming soon!). What I have found to be particularly powerful are the connections and comparisons the writers make between culturally well-known women, like the Women of Wakanda and those listed above, and the less-well-known-but-ever-important women who have held their lives, families and communities together over generations, including their mothers, grandmothers, aunties, sisters and friends. Â As in the preceding weeks, this weekâs posts promise to pack a stimulating and intellectual punch – be sure to tune in!
Want to get alerts when they post? Receive email updates by joining their site as a member (click âJoin Nowâ under the avatar on their profile page) and/or follow them on Twitter (@CityTechOpenLab).
Want to become (or recommend a student to become) a blogger? The Buzz is hiring for next year! Be on the lookout for the hiring call – coming in a few weeks!
This week weâre spotlighting the Opening Gateways project site. Opening Gateways is a 5-year, $3.2 million grant funded1 project collaboration with BMCC that âsupports student success in mathematics courses that serve as gateways to STEM disciplinesâ. As in other disciplines, gateway courses leading to STEM fields have critical implications for the college and life trajectories of students. As the team points out in their Project Abstract, ârepeated failure [can] deflect students from their chosen major [or] delay or even end their journey to a degreeâ.
The Opening Gateways project takes a three-pronged approach to addressing this challenge:
Open-source Digital Technologies: WebWork and the OpenLab are open-source platforms for teaching, learning and collaborating. WebWork replaces the âemail professor with questionâ button, and instead sends students to a platform where they can get help from not only the professor but other students – in their class and more. The OpenLab team is working on integrating WebWork into their WordPress-based and BuddyPress-based platform, and then will share the code broadly as open source and available. The OpenLab will also support the OERs and courses among City Tech faculty.
Open Educational Resources: Participating faculty will or have assembled open educational resources on specific mathematical topics. These OERs are open, publically available and free, and serve as a good alternative to (sometimes prohibitively) costly textbooks. See those created in 2016/2017.
Active Learning Pedagogies. A pedagogical intervention in the form of a faculty seminar where a cohort will be introduced to a variety of active learning techniques, and the technologies involved in supporting this project. Each seminar at City Tech has a corresponding site on the Openlab.
The project tracks their progress each year – see Year 1 and Year 2.
As noted earlier, this project aims to support student success in STEM gateway courses. The challenges to success in these gateway courses, are true of other degree paths.
Opening Gateways uses a multi-tiered approach that involves faculty training, technological development of a collaborative digital learning environment, and the creation of support resources for students to resolving these challenges.
How can you imagine better supporting student success in gateway course for your degree path?
Letâs Discuss!: Join us on this Thursday, March 22nd, from 5:30pm – 7:00pm in the Faculty Commons (N227) for an Open Pedagogy event titled, “Gateway Courses in Open Digital Pedagogy” that will continue this conversation. Light refreshments will be served, and part-time faculty will be eligible for a stipend (Event info and/or RSVP).
UPDATE: In anticipation of the impending snowstorm, weâre postponing this event. Weâll work on rescheduling and will let you know when this event is back on our calendar.
1Funded by the US Dept of Educationâs Developing Hispanic-Serving Institutions program (Title V).
This week weâre spotlighting the Winter Python Workshop 2018 project site. Created by mathematics professor Johann Thiel, this project site was developed to support a four-day workshop that covered the basics of python and explored some applications of the popular programming language in mathematics, biology, statistics and more.
Though the workshop is long over now, this site is a GREAT resource for any OpenLab members* learning python or interested in learning python. The site contains a list of resources and software on its homepage, as well as pages containing links to basic and more advanced applications of the language. Given this latter point, this site would be useful to beginner or intermediate python users, and could help a beginner practice their skills with the goal of becoming an intermediate user.
If you would prefer a more immersive, intensive and supported introduction to the programming language, keep an eye out for future winter python workshops. Though Professor Thiel was unsure if the workshop would run again, it has run the last two winters (see the 2017 workshop site) so it seems possible that there will be an opportunity to participate in Winter 2019. If this sounds like something of interest to you, get in touch with Professor Thiel.
*NOTE: This site is only available to OpenLab members so be sure you are signed in to the OpenLab before you attempt to access their course site.
This week weâre spotlighting The Gowanus Project. This project explores the neighborhood and the history of its namesake, the Gowanus Canal, from four angles: arts and community, community and displacement, green infrastructure, and public space. Each section has curated images, an outline, an annotated bibliography and a podcast. Together, the visitor is taken on a multisensory adventure of the neighborhood that explores the past and present of the neighborhood, and the main contentions forming its future.
This project is the culmination of a semester-long inquiry into the Gowanus Canal led by Professors Nora Almeida and Amira Joelson for their LIB/Arch 2205 course. Over the course of the semester, students became âexpertsâ on the canal and its history through readings, podcasts, documentaries, and site visits. They digested their growing knowledge of the canal through written site reports summarizing their visits, and snapping photos and sketching out specific features of the surrounding built environment.
On a technical level, this project is an excellent example of how to transform coursework into a publically interesting and useful project. For those of us who use the OpenLab, at the end of the semester our course sites are often full of interesting insights from our students. However, the content remains organized for a classroom audience. In some cases, this works – allowing another outside visitor to review and maybe even take your course. Nora and Amiraâs approach to using the OpenLab for this course offers an alternative. By reorganizing the content on your site, or creating a separate project site as Nora and Amira did in this case, you can configure studentsâ insights in a way that is more legible to an external audience.
This project also makes an important pedagogical pivot worth noting; using the OpenLab, it reworks traditional âlearningâ relationships and re-situates students in the domain of public knowledge. In our classrooms, students are often situated as âthe learnersâ – those who take in information. This project, however, uses the OpenLab to also situate students as the knowers, and as the producers, curators, and sharers of knowledge. In many ways, this re-situating represents an important potentiality of open digital pedagogy and what can be achieved on the OpenLab, and we encourage you to consider if this is a value you can achieve in your courses as well.
This week weâre spotlight the CUNY and the UN: A Partnership project site. This site represents the year-long efforts of two City Tech faculty in mathematics – Professor Marianna Bonanome and Professor Samar ElHitti – Â in forming âa partnership that can propel progress toward the global education goal (SDG4) between CUNY, the countryâs largest public university and the UNâ. More specifically, their aim was to â[build] an understanding within the CUNY student population of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, SDG$, and [seed] a movement of informed youth advocates in local, national and international education spaces.â Through conversations with the Paris GEM Report team at UNESCO, the CUNY Youth Ambassador (CYA) role was formed.
The yearly-appointed CYA plays a critical role in spreading awareness about the sustainable development goals and is invited to attend the UN Youth Assembly.
Interested in being the CYA next year or learning more about what the role entails?
On their project site, you can read about this yearâs CYA, Farjana Shati, and her experiences at the UN Youth Assembly and as a CYA more generally.
Curious about how Professors Bonanome and ElHitti developed their relationship with the UN and proposed this project?
Read their story on the site and/or in their op-ed for PassBlue, âan independent, women-led digital publication offering in-depth journalism on the US-UN relationship and its effects on urgent global mattersâ.
This week weâre spotlighting a post that lays out what you can do to improve accessibility on your OpenLab sites composed by the OpenLabâs Senior Instructional Technologist, Bree Zuckerman. Specifically, Breeâs post explains how to make sure documents, images, video, animation and links are accessible to all visitors, and how to present your content in a way that is legible to those with a range of disabilities. Bonus: These changes also generally improve the usability of your site for all users!
It is possible that you wonât have to change too much — for example, many users already use headings, or insert links into descriptive phrases (like the hyperlinked text, âa postâ, above) rather than vague ones like ââclick hereâ.â
In addition, the OpenLab has activated a network-wide plugin, WP Accessibility Plugin, that builds features into the design of the OpenLab which support accessible-practices when creating on the OpenLab.
Just as it is important to be mindful of accessibility when planning and constructing physical infrastructure such as buildings and sidewalks, it is critical that we are mindful of accessible design when creating on the OpenLab and in other digital spaces. Making our sites on the OpenLab accessible means that people with disabilities can, ideally, better perceive, understand, navigate, and interact with the various features of our sites. This may include navigating through a page or a menu, reading a PDF, or âviewingâ an image or video. There are some specific ways OpenLab members can address issues of accessibility and ensure that all visitors to their sites are able to access the sitesâ material equally.
In implementing these practices on your current and future OpenLab sites, youâre also ensuring that the OpenLab stays true to its foundational goal of creating and sustaining an open digital space where all City Tech students, faculty, staff, and alumni can work together, experiment, and innovate, ultimately enriching the intellectual and social life of our college community.
Related Upcoming Events & Workshops
In supporting OpenLab members in the thinking-and-doing of accessibility, the Community Team will host an Open Pedagogy Event focused on this topic, and a related hands-on workshop.
Open Pedagogy Event (THIS WEEK): Accessibility on the OpenLab Thursday 2/22 5:30pm – 7:00pm in the Faculty Commons (N227) RSVP This event continues the conversation about how designing the college experience with accessibility in mind benefits our communities. Weâll engage each other about how standards and accommodations vary across the disciplines. Our discussion will focus on universal design and how it can be incorporated into our pedagogy, mentorship, and administrative work on campus and beyond.
Workshop: Accessibility-a-thon! Thursday 3/8 1:30pm – 3:30pm, Room TBA RSVP (Coming Soon) This workshop offers OpenLab users an opportunity to get in-person support with improving the accessibility and usability of their sites. The OpenLab Community Team invites members of City Tech to drop-in anytime and stay as long as youâd like (up to 2 hours).
In addition to these events, OpenLab members are always welcome to bring questions of accessible/universal design to our office hours or to contact us at openlab@citytech.cuny.edu.
This week weâre spotlighting a renewed form of support – customized workshops for faculty, staff, or students in your departments, offices, and other stakeholder groups at City Tech. In contrast to the general offerings weâve done in the past, these targeted workshops will be designed specifically for your group. In designing your workshop, the OpenLab Community Team will work directly with you to ensure your groupâs needs are met. Please note that workshops are accepted on a rolling basis, so get your requests in early if you want to have the workshop this semester.
Happy New Year and welcome back! As you all are sinking back into your semesterly routines, we want to take a moment to highlight the different ways weâre here to support and engage you this semester.
Spring 2018 Office Hours
Meet with a member of the OpenLab Community Team for face-to- face support.
Office hours are held in the conference room of the Faculty Commons, N227.
Support Documentation
We have help(ful) documentation on the OpenLab that offers step-by-step guides for everything from getting started, to thinking about specific plugins that build out the functionality of your sites and portfolios.
We encourage you to become members of our in-house sites (you can do so by visiting the profiles of each site). These sites will keep you up-to-date with all things âOpenLabâ and offer opportunities for deeper investment with City Techâs community.
Learn more about the OpenLab, including workshops, events, community, and support opportunities on The Open Road. (Profile)
Follow our student bloggers, who chronicle various aspects of their lives at City Tech and beyond, on The Buzz. (Profile)
Share and discuss resources about open digital pedagogy with other City Tech and CUNY-wide staff and faculty on Open Pedagogy on the OpenLab. (Profile)
Spring 2018 Open Pedagogy Events – Faculty and Staff
As in semesters past, we will have two Open Pedagogy events in Spring 2018. The dates are set for Thursday February 22 and Thursday March 22 – from 5:30pm to 7:00pm in the Faculty Commons (N227). Learn more here.
We hope to see you around soon! Wishing you all a happy semester!