This week’s Monday Morning Mentor from AIEL

This week’s Monday Morning Mentor topic from Magna Publications:
How Can I Engage Students During a Synchronous Online Class?

Presentation date: Feb. 13, 2023, and on-demand for one week
View the presentation and access the transcript, handouts and supplemental material: https://mondaymorningmentors.com.

NOTE: You will need to enter the following password in order to view this week’s program: engage574.

Access to the programs in the Monday Morning Mentor series is restricted to members of the subscribing institution. Any unauthorized use or access, including sharing access with faculty and staff not affiliated with the subscribing institution, is prohibited.

Daring Dialogues and Courageous Conversations today, 3 p.m.

Join AIeL today, Feb. 9, as they kick off their February workshops with Daring Dialogues and Courageous Conversations, the first of three workshops sponsored by the LLCC Workforce Equity Initiative and presented by members the Office of Community College Research and Leadership (OCCRL). Please register in advance for each session in this series.

Each session has been designed to strengthen overall cultural competency, awareness, and use of culturally responsive teaching and learning practices to foster and improve equitable outcomes among students. The series will offer faculty and staff an opportunity learn more about DEI practices in education and to establish effective strategies in support of  LLCC students in both workforce and general education courses.

Note: Faculty will receive two points for each workshop in the series toward their Training and Innovation professional development total for successful completion of this workshop.

Daring Dialogues and Courageous Conversations

Today, Feb. 9, 3-4:30 p.m. in MNRD 2202
​​​​​​​Register for Feb. 9 workshop​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

This workshop engages faculty and staff as they examine and increase their individual and collective awareness of anti-bias and anti-racist attitudes and behaviors in efforts to reduce the impact of conscious and unconscious biases and “isms” on students, especially those in WEI-related courses, programs and workplace experiences. More specifically, OCCRL will facilitate conversations and activities that provide an opportunity for faculty and staff to reflect on their own personal identities and positionality and its impact on their teaching practices, interactions with students and students’ engagement in their courses and programs. With specific attention to demographics at LLCC and the communities in District 526, this session will broaden awareness of how various factors like race, ethnicity, culture, socioeconomic, (dis)ability and immigration status impact the experiences and outcomes of our students. Finally, this session will expand understanding of concepts like implicit bias and microaggressions and discuss ways to reduce their harmful effects, foster a more inclusive and welcoming programmatic culture, and ultimately advance equitable outcomes for students in at LLCC. This training will conclude with a reflection/call-to-action activity that provides an opportunity for faculty to identify individual and collective action steps they can take to counteract microaggressions and biases in their courses, programs and departments.

Additional sessions in the series:

Embedding Equity in the Classroom and Everyday Practice

Thursday, Feb. 23, 3-4:30 p.m. in the Trutter Center
Register for the Feb. 23 workshop​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

Classroom Equity Practices and Reflection Discussion

Thursday, April 6, 3-4:30 p.m. in the Trutter Center
Register for the April 6 workshop​​​​​​​

Global Inequality & Poverty workshop Feb. 24

The Midwest Institute for International-Intercultural Education will be hosting the Zoom-based workshop Global Inequality & Poverty on Friday, Feb. 24, 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. (ET).

Global Inequality & Poverty: This workshop will examine the major factors and forces of poverty and inequality from a global perspective.  In the morning, we will discuss the trends and consequences of global inequality and poverty and efforts to reduce them and provide for basic human needs and human potential. In the afternoon, we will discuss the historical interface of inequality/poverty, colonialism, and environment.

Registration for this workshop is $25. Contact Rihab Sawah, professor of physics , (rihab.sawah@llcc.edu) with any questions.

This week’s Monday Morning Mentor from AIEL

This week’s Monday Morning Mentor topic from Magna Publications:
How Can I Write a Course Syllabus That’s Worth Reading?

Presentation date: Feb. 6, 2023, and on-demand for one week
View the presentation and access the transcript, handouts and supplemental material: https://mondaymorningmentors.com.

NOTE: You will need to enter the following password in order to view this week’s program: syllabus253.

Access to the programs in the Monday Morning Mentor series is restricted to members of the subscribing institution. Any unauthorized use or access, including sharing access with faculty and staff not affiliated with the subscribing institution, is prohibited.

Central and Southern Illinois Faculty Development Network workshop today

LLCC faculty and staff are invited to attend “Upgrading, or Why It’s Time to Rethink How We Assess” taking place today, Feb. 3, noon to 1 p.m. via Zoom (https://go.uis.edu/CFEZoom). Stephanie Kratz, coordinator of faculty academies at Heartland Community College will be presenting. The workshop is sponsored by the Central and Southern Illinois Faculty Development Network.

The presentation will:

  • Consider limitations of traditional grading methods.
  • Explore how alternative grading methods — including but not limited to ungrading — help address these limitations.
  • Share ideas about the future of grading.

Participants will be invited to share what grades mean to them and to consider the opportunities and challenges presented by alternative forms of assessment.

Central and Southern Illinois Faculty Development Network workshop Friday

LLCC faculty and staff are invited to attend “Upgrading, or Why It’s Time to Rethink How We Assess” taking place Friday, Feb. 3, noon to 1 p.m. via Zoom (https://go.uis.edu/CFEZoom). Stephanie Kratz, coordinator of faculty academies at Heartland Community College will be presenting. The workshop is sponsored by the Central and Southern Illinois Faculty Development Network.

The presentation will:

  • Consider limitations of traditional grading methods.
  • Explore how alternative grading methods — including but not limited to ungrading — help address these limitations.
  • Share ideas about the future of grading.

Participants will be invited to share what grades mean to them and to consider the opportunities and challenges presented by alternative forms of assessment.

AIeL workshop today, 11:30 a.m.

Join LLCC Academic Innovation and eLearning today for the first session in this semester’s brown bag series. The session will include drinks and dessert for those in attendance.

Instead of a Paper: Podcast, Blogs and Other Things AI Struggles With … But Students Like

Presented by: Dr. Christopher McDonald, professor, political science

Today, Jan. 31, 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
Robert H. Stephens Room
​​​​​​​Register for Instead of a Paper​​​​​​​

Over the past few years, I have been moving away from traditional research/term papers and toward alternative ways in which students can demonstrate knowledge. The recent concern over AI has added another dimension to this. This presentation will showcase the sorts of things students produce, some of their observations on the process and a basic outline of how I set these up in Canvas (which currently does not have a Blog function).

Note: Faculty can receive one point toward their Training and Innovation professional development total for successful completion of this workshop.

This week’s Monday Morning Mentor from AIEL

This week’s Monday Morning Mentor topic from Magna Publications:
How Can I Structure Class Discussions to Maximize Student Engagement?

Presentation date: Jan. 30, 2023, and on-demand for one week
View the presentation and access the transcript, handouts and supplemental material: https://mondaymorningmentors.com.

NOTE: You will need to enter the following password in order to view this week’s program: structure730.

Access to the programs in the Monday Morning Mentor series is restricted to members of the subscribing institution. Any unauthorized use or access, including sharing access with faculty and staff not affiliated with the subscribing institution, is prohibited.

This week’s Monday Morning Mentor from AIEL

This week’s Monday Morning Mentor topic from Magna Publications:
What Is the Best Teaching Advice I Ever Received?

Presentation date: Jan. 23, 2023, and on-demand for one week
View the presentation and access the transcript, handouts and supplemental material: https://mondaymorningmentors.com.

NOTE: You will need to enter the following password in order to view this week’s program: teaching812.

Access to the programs in the Monday Morning Mentor series is restricted to members of the subscribing institution. Any unauthorized use or access, including sharing access with faculty and staff not affiliated with the subscribing institution, is prohibited.

This week’s Monday Morning Mentor from AIEL

This week’s Monday Morning Mentor topic from Magna Publications:
What Are Three Calendar Hacks Faculty Can Use to Avoid Stress and Burnout?

Presentation date: Dec. 5, 2022, and on-demand for one week
View the presentation and access the transcript, handouts and supplemental material: https://mondaymorningmentors.com.

NOTE: You will need to enter the following password in order to view this week’s program: calendar12.

Access to the programs in the Monday Morning Mentor series is restricted to members of the subscribing institution. Any unauthorized use or access, including sharing access with faculty and staff not affiliated with the subscribing institution, is prohibited.