Faculty Professional Development

Our work as educators involves helping each other to grow and gain expertise not only in our diverse subject areas, but in shared knowledge and technical abilities. Equally important to our mission is the shared space we can create for collaborative and inquisitive thinking about teaching and how students learn — from us and from each other.

The Center for Teaching and Online Learning hosts a number of professional development opportunities for all faculty. Explore the resources below for more information on our programming.

CTOL Calendar of Events

CTOL Live Training Calendar - SPSCC Library 

Faculty Leadership, Shared Governance, and Current Issues in Higher Education

Facilitated by David Hyde and C.J. Dosch

This Community of Practice will cultivate faculty leadership skills while familiarizing participants with college structures and examining current issues in higher education. It supports the range of college core themes by providing participants with the skills and knowledge to engage with various higher educational issues while learning the processes particular to South Puget Sound Community College. 

The CoP will address three primary areas: 

Leadership skills development—Includes techniques and practices (facilitation, communication, research, using your voice, committee participation, starting campus initiatives, funding, etc.) for faculty to fully participate in and contribute to shared governance activities. 

College organization—Explores and reviews college and inter-collegiate structures and processes including campus organization, strategic planning, collective bargaining, shared governance, faculty organizations, and the State Board for Community and Technical Colleges. 

Current issues—Examines “hot topics” in higher education practice and policy (DEI, federal policy, pathways, student financial aid, funding, etc.) Participants will examine multiple “sides” and stakeholders on these issues, with an emphasis on how faculty leadership can be applied to engage with these topics. 

Who is it for: Any and all faculty who would like to be more involved in college governance, planning, and decision-making; would like to learn more about college structures, systems, and organization; would like to improve their leadership skills; or would like to discuss “hot topics” and current events in higher education practice and policy. 

The CoP will meet 6 times over the year for an hour each time, near the beginning and end of each quarter. 

As a textual resource for this CoP, we’ll seek to obtain a college library subscription to the Chronicle of Higher Education for participant use.

 

Art and STEM Integrated Assignments

Facilitated by John Schaub and Joe Batt

Get outside your comfort zone by collaborating on unique assignments with someone outside your discipline. Learn new and unexpected ways of connecting with students about your subject area....

Will be in-person, at least mostly, but can be flexible. Will meet at least twice quarterly for an hour equaling at least 6 hours per year.

 

Latest Research in STEM Pedagogy  

Facilitated by James Chen  

Focusing on current science pedagogy and open to all faculty interested in this conversation. Will include search and review of recent science-focused peer-reviewed educational literature and related media, with discussion of evidence promoting ongoing science educational and collaborative efforts.  

Yearlong, 5 to 6 meetings total, in-person (virtual option only as needed).  Will meet at least 6 hours per year.  

 

Reading Group - Digital Accessibility by Rae Mancilla and Barbara A. Frey

Facilitated by Kyle Gonzalez

This will be a reading CoP centered around the book Digital Accessibility by Rae Mancilla and Barbara A. Frey. This book addresses many aspects of digital accessibility from policy to tools, to professional development, all through showcasing experiences and practices of Quality Matters institutions. This CoP will focus on Part Three: Digital Accessibility Course Development Practices and Tools and Part Four: Digital Accessibility Professional Development. The group will discuss the book and consider practical application of the presented concepts.

Hybrid modality. Reading on our own with meetings held in person with a virtual option. Will meet for 1 two hour session each quarter unless the group prefers 2 one hour sessions per quarter. Will meet at least 6 hours per year.

 

Decolonial Ecologies: Pedagogies of Attunement and Reciprocity

Facilitated by Kathleen Byrd and Matt Ito

This Community of Practice is a continuation of last year’s reading and discussion of Daniel Heath Justice’s Why Indigenous Literatures Matter. In the thread of thinking ecologically, we invite participants to bring their own experiences, texts, ways of thinking, and ways of being to attune to the ever-shifting currents of our classrooms. 

Teaching, like so many other practices that underscore our daily lives, is about building relationships. How do we build relationships with our students? How do we attune to their needs, their learning styles, their communities, their literacies? How might our classrooms be a space to invite and integrate these lived experiences, literacies, and knowledges? How might we practice reciprocity in lieu of these attunements—in the classroom and beyond?


In the scope of this Community of Practice, we will continue turning to relationality as understood by Justice and alongside other Indigenous scholars from the North American continent and the Pacific as a way to think through our own ecologies, as well as those brought into our classrooms. In doing so, we hope to empower fellow faculty members to visualize and work toward their own specific acts of care in their classrooms, communities, and beyond informed by the literacies and relationalities of our students. 

Texts (or excerpts from texts) for consideration include but are not limited to: The Serviceberry by Robin Wall Kimmerer, The Truth About Stories by Thomas King, As We Have Always Done by Leanne Simpson, The Seeds We Planted by Noelani Goodyear-Kaʻōpua, and Kaiāulu by Mehana Blaich Vaughan.

Meetings: In Person, 1-2x/quarter, 1-2hr/meeting (depending on member's schedules, availability, etc.). Will meet at least 6 hours per year.

 

Alternative Grading Strategies – AKA Ungrading

Facilitated by Heather Maye

This CoP will start out with learning alternative grading strategies and techniques, then will be guided by the group's interest in discussing, planning, and possibly implementing alternative grading in their own courses. Discussions will be around how alternative grading could work in a class, support on creating a plan, and how to implement alternative grading.  

Yearlong, 5 to 6 meetings total, 1 – 2 meetings each quarter with in-person meetings for 1 – 2 hours each.  Will meet at least 6 hours per year.

 

Service Learning (SL) CoP

Facilitated by Sanjay Lanka and Parakh Hoon

The SL CoP aims to promote experiential service learning opportunities for both faculty and students at SPSCC through mutual engagement in teaching, learning, and service. Social justice is the guiding principle with a focus on real-world education for future community leaders strengthening SPSCC’s role as an engaged community member while providing our students an educational experience that integrates service, reflection, and academic learning. 
One of the focus areas for the CoP is a discussion of existing and potential community partnerships including the identification of local organizations that would be good partners for existing courses and look at ways to establish mutually beneficial relationships with these organizations. 

The focus in the first quarter will be on a discussion of these existing relationships with a focus on ways to incorporate these into existing classes at SPSCC. This reflection and assessment of existing community engagement is aimed to provide an opportunity for effective transparent evaluation of program impact with regards to social justice. One of the key outcomes of the CoP at this stage will be resource sharing and sharing of best practices. 
In the second quarter, the CoP will focus on discussion of the program structure and curriculum for the participating faculty members looking at ways to integrate into the existing curriculum service-learning components. This will build on the existing community partnerships that we discussed in the 1st quarter and look for ways to integrate them better into existing courses. 

In the final quarter, we will focus our discussion on interest in developing new service-learning specific courses. This will build on discussion of current student learning objectives and ways in which we can improve existing courses to develop our students as "Multicultural Community Builders". The goal of this process will be to update our courses to enable our students to acquire enhanced knowledge, skills, and attitudes for diverse society engagement that will foster a commitment to public and community service among our students.

The CoP will meet for one two-hour session each quarter, yearlong, in-person.  Will meet at least 6 hours per year.   

Mind Over Monsters: Supporting Youth Mental Health with Compassionate Challenge by Sarah Cavanagh

Facilitated by Sally Sharbaugh This CoP will focus on reading the book Mind Over Monsters: Supporting Youth Mental Health with Compassionate Challenge by Sarah Cavanagh. She was the keynote at the recent ATL conference and her keynote speech was highly recommended.

The goal for the CoP would be to read the book together over the course of the year and discuss ways to implement “compassionate challenge” in the classroom and use the information in the book to inform instructor policies. Also to use the time to talk about what policies and strategies are working for faculty and which aren’t.

Asian American Inclusion and Visibility at SPSCC

Facilitated by Bin Zhang and Lily Kun

We will share and reflect on Asian American biases and invisibility within society, professional environments, and higher education, and develop thoughtful strategies to address, support and improve the inclusion and visibility of Asian American groups, particularly at SPSCC community.

Latest Research in STEM Pedagogy

Facilitated by James Chen

Focusing on current science pedagogy and open to all faculty interested in this conversation. Will include search and review of recent science-focused peer-reviewed educational literature and related media, with discussion of evidence promoting ongoing science educational and collaborative efforts.

Open Education and Showcasing Student Work

Facilitated by Ryer Banta

Join this community of practice to explore open educational practices and tools that can be used to showcase student work. This community of practice will be shaped by the interests and needs of the group. We will also explore ways in which open education intersects with diversity, equity, and inclusion for increased student success. Participants can expect readings, discussions, and time to talk through challenges and successes of implementing open education in their courses.

Open-Source Digital Media Symposium

Facilitated by Joe Batt, Michael Gray, Matthew Ito, and Aki Suzuki

This group will meet two to three times in Fall 2024 to plan class projects which integrate open-source digital media (such as Audacity and Inkscape) in meaningful ways with course content. During Winter 2025 we will support each other to complete these projects in our classes. All are welcome to join us for this project. There will be a culminating presentation of the results at a campus-wide event.

Reading Group - "Retelling" and (Re)presenting Canonical Novels

Facilitated by C.J. Dosch

This will be a year-long reading group meeting twice per quarter or as scheduled by the group. Participants may choose to take part in one or all three quarters as each quarter will focus on a different novel. The group will be exploring how contemporary writers "retell" and reposition our relationships to canonical narratives to push boundaries of identity and experience. We'll begin in Fall 2024 by reading the new Percival Everett book, James: A Novel. This novel is a retelling of Mark Twain's Adventures of Huckleberry Finn from the perspective of the runaway slave Jim (James). Winter and spring quarter selections will be chosen by the group from a list of highly acclaimed novels that use this alternative perspective approach to retell classic narratives. Options may include but are not limited to Wide Sargasso Sea, March, Hamnet, The Red Tent, Circe, or Demon Copperhead.

Book Discussion: Understanding Generational Culture

Facilitated by Chandra Miller-Starks and Ross Artwohl

We would read chapters from the text Generations by Jean Twenge. SPSCC is home to four generations: iGen/GenZ (11-28 y.o.); Millennial (29-43 y.o.); Gen X (44-58 y.o.) and Baby Boomer (59-77 y.o.) and Gen Alpha/Polars (1-14 y.o.) that will be in our classrooms in a couple of years. The oldest were born when “computers” were actual people employed for their math skills. The youngest arrived with pocket computers that surpass the combined power of ALL the computers used in the historic Apollo 11 moon landing in 1969. The former generation could connect across vast distance only with expensive long distance phone plans or letter writing and the latter connect almost for free with millions of people worldwide in an instant via social media. A literal printing press in every pocket! Older generations primarily expressed gender as a binary to younger generations who overwhelmingly see gender on a continuum among other worldview differences. Such differences create diversity in cultural norms and values. These often show-up on campus providing both opportunities and sometimes friction as generational cultures encounter each other. Here we hope to help us better “see” these cultural “waters” that we’re swimming in.

3D Printing and Modeling for Instruction

Facilitated by Adam Waters and Chad Bacon

The C.O.P. would offer training on SketchUp (software) for modeling purposes, slicer software and operations of 3D printers. modeling/prints content that could be relevant to their classrooms. Meetings held at Lacey 3 once a month, possibly tapering down to two meetings a quarter. We would help facilitate faculty on modeling their projects and prints throughout.

Decolonial Ecologies: Daniel Heath Justice’s Why Indigenous Literatures Matter and Reframing our Relationalities Across Disciplines

Cofacilitated by Kathleen Byrd and Matthew Ito

For this community of practice, we will read and discuss Why Indigenous Literatures Matter, by Cherokee scholar Daniel Heath Justice, and consider ways of incorporating relationality into our teaching and learning practices. Justice uses the concept of kinship and being a “good relative” to illustrate understanding relationality as an ethic. Justice suggests that “to be a good relative, to be fully kin, we must put that relatedness into thoughtful and respectful practice, individually and collectively, and take up our responsibilities to one another and to the world of which we’re a part” (86). He continues this thread by referencing Robin Wall Kimmerer’s work in Braiding Sweetgrass and her turn to reciprocity as an expression of healthy relationalities grounded in responsibility, gratitude, and mutually beneficial exchange. We will use the concept of relationality as understood by Justice and alongside other Indigenous scholars from the North American continent and the Pacific as a way to think through our own ecologies, as well as those brought into our classrooms. In doing so, we hope to empower fellow faculty members to visualize and work toward their own specific acts of care in their classrooms, communities, and beyond informed by the literacies and relationalities of our students.

Generative AI & Student Success

Facilitated by Jennifer Wortman

We will discuss and reflect on the shift away from 'policing' generative AI and move towards integrating assisted AI into classes. In addition, we will consider AI information literacy skills students will need to navigate the evolving world of AI. The goal is to think through ethical use of AI for students (and possibly instructors) and strategize ways to educate students about the potential benefits and problems of generative AI.

Strategies for Closing Equity Gaps

Facilitated by Amanda Ybarra and Jennifer Gilliard

There will be a different topic each quarter that revolves around the idea of closing equity gaps in teaching. We will hold one session a quarter for two hours and let people drop into a single session or sign up for the whole year.

Peer Coaching

Facilitated by Heather Williams and Heather Maye

This is an opportunity for instructors who want to improve their skills in giving and receiving formative feedback with the goal of improving instructional practice. Research has shown that teachers benefit from a collaborative observation process - one that allows them to be in dialogue with peers and seek feedback on their specific concerns. In fall quarter, we will meet twice to walk through the three stages of observation, consider the relationship between feedback and trust, and identify best practices for communication during the observation process. Participants who wish to proceed will be paired and complete peer observations during winter and/or spring quarters.

Asian American Inclusion and Visibility at SPSCC

Facilitated by Bin Zhang and Lily Kun

We will share and reflect on Asian American biases and invisibility within society, professional environments, and higher education, and develop thoughtful strategies to address, support and improve the inclusion and visibility of Asian American groups, particularly at SPSCC community.

Yearlong, in person, 1-2 meetings per quarter

Climate Solutions and Climate Justice: Reading and Discussion Group

Facilitated by Kathleen Byrd and John Schaub

We will read books on climate solutions and climate justice and discuss ways of integrating climate solutions and justice topics into the curriculum. We will also discuss climate grief and mental health impacts of climate grief and climate change. This COP will meet all year, focusing on one book per quarter.

Yearlong, in-person or hybrid, 2 meetings per quarter

Critical Language Awareness

Facilitated by Julie Williamson

This yearlong community will examine language ideologies and explore the instructional practices of incorporating inclusive opportunities for students coming from all language variety backgrounds to engage in college work critically and creatively with their full linguistic capacities. THE CLA lens can be helpful for bridging that ever present tension of preparing students for current expectations and for empowering them (and us) to expand our notions of "Standard" or "Academic" English.

Yearlong, 2 meetings per quarter, in person with supplementary online content

Inclusive Pedagogy

Facilitated by Amanda Ybarra and Amy Tureen

This yearlong community of practice will read The Norton Guide to Equity-Minded Teaching. We will structure discussions around the text itself, which addresses designing for equity, inclusive day-to-day teaching practices, and critical reflection via self-examination of course data. Other supplemental materials may be provided but will not be required. The community will meet two times per quarter (Fall, Winter, and Spring). The modality of group meetings will be chosen by the participants and may include a hybrid option. Download a free copy of The Norton Guide to Equity-Minded Teaching.

Latest Research in STEM Pedagogy

Facilitated by James Chen

Focusing on current science pedagogy and open to all faculty interested in this conversation. Will include search and review of recent science-focused peer-reviewed educational literature and related media, with discussion of evidence promoting ongoing science educational and collaborative efforts.  

Yearlong, 5 meetings total, virtual and / or in-person depending on the needs of the group

Open Education

Facilitated by Ryer Banta

We will explore the facets of open education, including open educational resources (OER), open licensing, and open pedagogy. We will also pay special attention to the ways in which open education intersects with diversity, equity, and inclusion for increased student success. Participants can expect readings, discussions, and time to talk through challenges and successes of implementing open education in their courses.

Yearlong, in person, 2 meetings per quarter, with online readings/supplemental materials

Open-Source Digital Media Symposium

Facilitated by Joe Batt, Michael Gray, Matthew Ito, and Aki Suzuki

This group will meet two to three times in Fall 2023 to plan class projects which integrate open-source digital media (such as Audacity and Inkscape) in meaningful ways with course content. During Winter 2024 we will support each other to complete these projects in our classes. All are welcome to join us for this project. There will be a culminating presentation of the results at a campus-wide event.

Yearlong, in-person

Psychology of Diversity

Facilitated by James Chen

Based on a Harvard course, this community of practice explores issues of diversity from a psychological perspective. Through selected audiovisual and written media, we will reflect upon the impacts and perceptions of diversity issues within/across/because of various group distinctions. We will study diversity in a non-binary manner, and create a safe space for a variety of thoughts on diversity to be expressed.

Yearlong, 5 meetings total, virtual and / or in-person depending on the needs of the group

Reading Group: Native American Literature

Facilitated by C.J. Dosch

This community of practice will read Calling for a Blanket Dance by Oscar Hokeah. This book has received much recognition as a debut novel and won the PEN/Hemingway Award this year. Based on participants' reading pace, this community of practice will last 1-2 quarters, meeting to discuss the novel 2-3 times.  If desired, the reading group could be extended for additional quarters to reading related pieces of fiction or non-fiction to build a deeper experience with contemporary Native American literature. The primary modality will be chosen by participants with at least some in-person discussion to create shared community.

Ungrading  

Facilitated by Heather Ryan and John Schaub

We will explore ungrading: what it means, what forms it can take, some of the logistics, and ways to employ ungrading as an equity-based pedagogical practice. Participants can expect readings, discussions, and time to workshop and trouble shoot for those who implement ungrading elements into their courses.  

Yearlong, in person, 2 meetings per quarter, with online readings/supplemental materials 

Developing Assessments and Educational Resources with Technology 

led by Julia Trude
This community of practice will explore the different forms of technology available to support students learning as well as evaluating through assessments. Participants can present resources that they are using already or want to learn more about with discussions of applications across different content and disciplines. Yearlong, 2-3 meetings per quarter

Growing Leadership 

led by Heather Maye
This Community of Practice will focus on leadership concepts to strengthen our own leadership abilities and can also be focused on teaching others (students) how to become leaders. We will read the book Dare to Lead by Brené Brown and choose a second book to read together later in the year. The discussions will include reflection and analysis on the leadership concepts covered and will focus on how the topics fit with consideration of diversity, equity, and inclusion. Yearlong, 2 meetings per quarter. First session on Zoom with the option to meet in-person if the group unanimously decides.

Crossing the Political Divide 

led by Michael Haensel
As America becomes more politically polarized, universities and faculty have a place in fostering understanding. We'll read and discuss John Haidt's "The Righteous Mind: Why Good People are Divided by Politics and Religion." Outlines with a little additional analysis are available to reduce the reading load. John Haidt’s moral foundations theory explains why liberals and conservatives argue past each other much of the time. It also explains blind spots for both groups. Let’s discuss and reflect on how this applies to our lives, our students, our campus, and our community. Yearlong, 1-2 Zoom meetings per quarter

Latest Research in STEM Pedagogy 

led by James Chen
Focusing on current science pedagogy and open to all faculty interested in this conversation. Will include search and review of recent science-focused peer-reviewed educational literature and related media, with discussion of evidence promoting ongoing science educational and collaborative efforts. Yearlong, 5 meetings total, virtual and / or in-person depending on the needs of the group

Principles of the Trauma-Informed Classroom 

led by Chandra Miller-Starks
This Community of Practice will explore the principles of Trauma Informed Classrooms. Faculty will learn about these principles, evaluate their classrooms, implement trauma informed practices, and share experiences. Yearlong, 2 meetings per quarter, flexible format (virtual and in-person)

Psychology of Diversity 

led by James Chen
Based on a Harvard course, this community of practice explores issues of diversity from a psychological perspective. Through selected audiovisual and written media, we will reflect upon the impacts and perceptions of diversity issues within/across/because of various group distinctions. We will study diversity in a non-binary manner, and create a safe space for a variety of thoughts on diversity to be expressed Yearlong, 5 meetings total, virtual and / or in-person depending on the needs of the group

Teaching and Learning in a Post-COVID World 

led by Kathleen Byrd and Jenn Berney
2020 turned our world and our classrooms upside down. In addition to the challenges, we continue to face around living through pandemic, we are also daunted by the harsh realities of climate change, injustice, and threats to democracy. In this community, we'll consider questions such as the following: How has COVID changed our teaching practices? How is the classroom evolving in the wake of those changes? How have students' needs and expectations changed? What do we imagine relinquishing or reviving in the wake of these changes? How might anti-racist and decolonizing pedagogies help us meet this moment? Yearlong, 2 meetings per quarter in-person, both indoors and outdoors.

Write Club – How Our Own Writing Can Heal and Inform Our Teaching Experience 

led by Jen Evans
This CoP allows us an opportunity to explore and share our own writing, while we reflect and share how our writing can and does inform our teaching experience. Whether you’re a budding novelist, a scholastic writer, a prolific or aspiring poet or songwriter, a daily journalist, an educator who expresses themselves through their assignments and yearly reflections, or some combination of all of these, this may be the CoP for you. Participants should be prepared to share what they’ve been writing either to seek out critique and assistance, or as a means to heal and come to a place of peace for the benefit of the classroom. No judgements, just assistance, collaboration and a supportive place to share writing and how it has been a reflection for and of our teaching experience. Yearlong, 1 – 2 meetings per quarter, primarily on Zoom with the possibility of an in-person gathering.