On April 3, 2017, faculty and graduate students from this year’s team-taught courses, Futures Initiative Peer Mentors, and the Humanities Alliance gathered for this daylong symposium celebrating their work that connects student-centered learning to institutional and social change.
- Public Google Doc with notes
- Storify of tweets
- Photos
10:00 – 10:10 | Welcome & Introductions
Welcome by Cathy N. Davidson
Opening remarks by Master of Ceremonies Kalle Westerling

After FI Director Cathy N. Davidson welcomed us all to the event, FI Fellow Kalle Westerling shared aspects of his own academic journey in coming to realize his pedagogical praxis. This is just one example of a “superpower” he didn’t know he had! In fact, the underlying theme among those who participate in FI is discovering superpowers and applying them in educational contexts in support of institutional and social change.

10:10 – 11:00 | Dimensions of Childhood
Students in Martin Ruck and Erika Niwa’s “The Social Construction of Childhood” created highly interactive stations based on thematic concepts related to the social construction of childhood including Gender and Girlhood; Empowement, Ability & Representation, Peacebuilding with Youth, Education and School, and Global Childhood.




11:10 – 11:30 | The Future of Sexual Health Care in the US: Issues Worth Fighting For
Diana Romero and Ananya Mukherjea discussed their course, “Social Inequality & Health Disparities,” including points of political priority for leading the ongoing struggle for robust sexual and reproductive healthcare provision in the US.

11:35 – 12:00 | Connecting Graduate Education and Community College Teaching
Through the Humanities Alliance, CUNY is developing new ways for doctoral programs and community colleges to work together to amplify humanities education, and support equitable access to and diversity within higher education. Provost Joy Connolly, Kaysi Holman, Elizabeth Alsop and Kitana Ananda addressed the opportunities and challenges of connecting graduate education with student-centered community college pedagogy.


12:10 – 1:00 | Education as Liberation, Education as Forming Publics
In the doctoral seminar “The Public and Publics,” students, co-instructors Amy Chazkel and Setha Low, and the visiting scholars they have brought into the class have inquired into the meanings and uses of the concept of the public as an analytical construct in both scholarship and in political life, past and present. Doctoral students Miranda Fedock, Matthew Finck, and Claudia Crowe led a discussion that brought these questions to bear on the theme of education, in two senses: education as forming publics, and education as a public resource. They used the classic liberationist text, Paulo Freire’s Pedagogy of the Oppressed (1968), and the field of critical pedagogy that it largely inspired, as an entry point.

2:10 – 3:00 | Fostering Connection, Renewal, and Leadership through Peer Mentoring
Undergraduate Futures Initiative Peer Mentors from across the CUNY campuses and Peer Mentoring program directors Lauren Melendez and Mike Rifino led an interactive session on how peer leadership can help students in a dispersed commuter system like CUNY foster connection and promote student success.

3:10 – 4:00 | Student-Centered and Active Learning
This highly interactive session featured mini-lessons for teaching psychology to undergraduates, designed by graduate students in Patricia Brooks and Jill Grose-Fifer’s “Seminar and Practicum on the Teaching of Psychology.” View the performance appraisal mini-lesson.

4:10 – 5:00 | Teaching Race, Gender, and Intersectional Theory
This interactive session led by graduate students in Cathy Davidson and Michael Gillespie’s course “Teaching Race and Gender Theory in the Undergraduate Classroom” highlighted the ways that race, gender, and intersectional theory can be introduced in general education humanities courses and also modeled in the world beyond. Graduate student participants were joined by Medgar Evers undergraduate, Ashe’ K. Collier. View the slide presentations on pedagogy and visuality.



5:00 | Closing remarks by Danica Savonick

5:00 – 6:00 | Reception and Structuring Equality book celebration (Room 3317)

Thank you to the Futures Initiative graduate fellows, faculty, graduate students, Peer Mentors, and the CUNY Humanities Alliance for making this event such a success!