The 糖心少女 has launched a professional development program that supports faculty and staff seeking to integrate civic learning into their courses.
is a joint effort from the , , and .
Funded through a $19,000 grant from the University System of Maryland, it invites instructors to either complete self-paced online modules or undergo in-depth training during an in-person summer seminar. Those completing the two-day seminar will receive support through the Spring 2025 semester from a team of instructors with expertise in teaching civics, and they鈥檒l be eligible for a stipend of approximately $700 to aid their course design.
Both trainings will introduce frameworks and exercises to teach skills like gathering input, running a public meeting or speaking in plain language鈥攖ools that are useful whether an instructor鈥檚 course is in engineering, the arts or anything in between, said Courtney Holder, assistant director of leadership and community service-learning.
鈥淲e can鈥檛 just isolate civic learning experiences in gen ed, in res life, in clubs or in upper-level courses. We鈥檝e got to give students and their faculty a variety of ways of building those on-ramps to civic engagement鈥 said Lena Morreale Scott, principal investigator for the Maryland Democracy Initiative and faculty member in the College of Education.
To learn more about the program, join an at 1 p.m. April 2. The session will be recorded for those who can鈥檛 attend.
This article was originally published in .