Submit your proposal here by January 29, 2018.
The American Democracy Project (ADP), The Democracy Commitment (TDC), and NASPA Lead Initiative are committed to advancing the civic engagement movement in higher education. During this year's Civic Learning and Democratic Engagement (#CLDE18) Meeting in Anaheim, Ca. from June 6-9, 2018, our goal is to bring together our collective networks of faculty, student affairs professionals, senior campus administrators, students, and community partners to advance our work to ensure that students graduate from our colleges and universities--both public and private--prepared to be the informed, engaged citizens that our communities and our democracy need.
When submitting a proposal for this year's convening the conference committee asks you to consider how to answer the four questions proposed in our emergent theory of change and how these threads and tags intersect with your work whether it be around assessment, political engagement, community partnerships, service-learning, dialogue and deliberation, and so forth.
This meeting is designed around our emergent theory of change which poses four important questions:
- Purpose: What are the key
features of the thriving democracy we aspire to enact and support through
our work?
- Learning Outcomes: What knowledge,
skills, and dispositions do people need in order to help create and contribute
to a thriving democracy?
- Pedagogy: How can we best
foster the acquisition and development of the knowledge, skills, and
dispositions necessary for a thriving democracy?
- Strategy: How can we build
the institutional culture, infrastructure, and relationships needed to
support learning that enables a thriving democracy?
The theory of change
also suggests that campuses consider how best to construct campus cultures and
contexts that foster:
- Civic Ethos of campus: The
infusion of democratic values into the customs and habits of everyday
practices, structures, and interactions; the defining character of the
institution and those in it that emphasizes open-mindedness, civility, the
worth of each person, ethical behaviors, and concern for the well-being of
others; a spirit of public-mindedness that influences the goals of the
institution and its engagement with local and global communities.
- Civic Literacy & Skill
Building as a goal for every student: The cultivation of
foundational knowledge about fundamental principles and debates about
democracy expressed over time, both within the United States and in other
countries; familiarity with several key historical struggles, campaigns,
and social movements undertaken to achieve the full promise of democracy;
the ability to think critically about complex issues and to seek and
evaluate information about issues that have public consequences.
- Civic Inquiry integrated within
the majors and general education: The practice of inquiring about the
civic dimensions and public consequences of a subject of study; the
exploration of the impact of choices on different constituencies and
entities, including the planet; the deliberate consideration of differing
points of views; the ability to describe and analyze civic intellectual
debates within one's major or areas of study.
- Civic Action as lifelong
practice: The capacity and commitment both to participate constructively
with diverse others and to work collectively to address common problems;
the practice of working in a pluralistic society and world to improve the
quality of people's lives and the sustainability of the planet; the
ability to analyze systems in order to plan and engage in public action;
the moral and political courage to take risks to achieve a greater public
good.
- Civic Agency involves the
capacities of citizens to work collaboratively across differences like
partisan ideology, faith traditions, income, geography, race, and
ethnicity to address common challenges, solve problems and create common
ground; requires a set of individual skills, knowledge, and
predispositions; also involves questions of institutional design,
particularly how to constitute groups and institutions for sustainable
collective action.
More details about the meeting can be found
here: 2018 Civic Learning and Democratic Engagement (CLDE) Meeting.
Submit your Program Proposal by January 29, 2018 and learn more about the #CLDE18 Meeting at the official meeting website.
Submit your Program Proposal by January 29, 2018 and learn more about the #CLDE18 Meeting at the official meeting website.
No comments:
Post a Comment