Courses
COIL Project: Global Sociology of Food
What is COIL?
The Global Sociology of Food is a COIL course. COIL is the Collaborative Online International Learning program. It promotes learning through global interactions and collaboration across boundaries of geography, language, culture, ethnicity, discipline and time-zone.
Through “Coiling” students from Georgia State University and Osaka University used Skype, Google Docs, and iCollege (Brighspace) to examine the social construction of food and food as a cultural marker of personal and ethnic identity.
Food & Identity
We devised a series of activities aimed to help students reflect critically about their identity and food…
Read the article: Writers' Fridges: by Olivia Liang in the Paris review:
After reading the article:
Take a picture of the exterior of your refrigerator.
Take pictures of the contents of either your own or your family’s refrigerator, including what’s been stored in the freezer section of the refrigerator.
Provide short descriptions of the content by answering 4 simple questions…
Authenticity, Community, Interaction
The discussion board is an integral part of many of my designs. My goal when designing discussions is to ensure that they are meaningful to the students. I steer clients away from using rote questions to check if students are reading the text books. It would be easier to do that, but I aim to provide opportunities for conceptual thinking and discovery. The discussion board is a place for students to apply their developing knowledge to new situations, explore a broad range of opinions, bring in the real-world and build a sense of community in the course. It can also be a place to take risks and create brave spaces for students to struggle with complex issues.
Portfolium
New students were introduced to Portfolium in the CTC course. Portfolium is a platform designed to allow students to create a visual, comprehensive view of their passions, abilities, and potential during their academic journey. The CTC course encourages students to document their coursework, projects, and experiences at Georgia State to demonstrate their career competencies. Portfolium also contains elements of social and professional networking and tools to create multimedia content.
Staff Innovators Program (SIP)
SIP is a year-long, cohort program that introduces the habits, mindsets, and techniques of Design Thinking to staff at Georgia State University. It is a hybrid program using a flipped model of online coursework and face-to-face workshops. It is designed to build creative confidence and develop the mindset and skills necessary to transform great ideas into innovative solutions.
Incorporate Local Experts
This video highlights a local expert. It is an example of how to apply the Diversity Readiness Rubric in course design. It follows an asset-based engagement model by creating course materials that include authentic local examples of mobilized community assets used to address relevant challenges.
The client and I identified several local experts that we could spotlight for the SIP course. We wanted to demonstrate to learners that they did not need to look outside of their community to find examples of successful innovation. The purpose was to create a sense of ownership, empowerment and encourage reflection.
I partnered with the multimedia team and client to script and shoot this video.