UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — An equity team consisting of about a dozen faculty and staff is piloting a curriculum that allows College of Education freshmen taking first-year seminar classes at Penn State during the fall semester to examine what their own values are and how their values and beliefs shape how they view the world.
The curriculum takes on equity-minded approaches through equity modules and the goal is to consider ways of cross-curricular implementation, not just in first-year seminars.
“But it made sense to start with the first-year seminars this year,” said Efraín Marimón, assistant professor of education, who is co-chairing the equity team with Elizabeth Smolcic, associate professor of education (English as a second language) and co-facilitating first-year seminar classes with doctoral student Carlos Medina.
“The big piece of this is both the immediate modules, but also thinking about our students in terms of their journey for the next four or five years at Penn State and beyond,” said Marimón, who also is the director or the Restorative Justice Initiative and director of the D.C. Social Justice Fellowship. “And moving from theory to practice is a key motivator. Typically, students respond in abstractions and what-ifs and one of the things this does is present very real situations or scenarios that have students think about immediate implications, short- and long-term, in terms of practice,” he said.
Class objectives include identifying considerations for creating an inclusive space; examining strategies/interventions to create inclusive educational spaces; identifying and critiquing personal biases; examining the role of power, race and identity in educational spaces; and making connections to practice and applying critical inquiry of equity issues.
The equity modules are implemented in each of the 18 first-year seminar classes to prompt deeper thinking by students who eventually might work in education policy, workforce or counselor education, or in-service teaching. “Our hope is to plant some seeds that will encourage (the students) to continue this type of engagement, both in their coursework — regardless of whether they’re College of Education classes or not — and also interpersonally with friends and families because this work requires that type of commitment,” Marimón said.
“It's less focused on delivering a very specific content as opposed to working to an inquiry-based model that has us think about what these social justice issues look like in practice.”