Faculty & Staff Resources
Past Events
Below are recordings of professional development programs. Check the Events Calendar for upcoming events.
Everything You Need to Know About FERPA – Chris Westby & Dr. Michele Campagna
The Effects of Racial Microaggressions on Belonging and Success for Students of Color – Dr. J. Luke Wood
The Effects of Racial Microaggressions on Belonging and Success for Students of Color
Date: Tuesday, May 25, 2021
Dr. J. Luke Wood
Racial microaggressions are commonly understood as racially insensitive snubs, slights, insults, and putdowns that invalidate the experiences and intellectual capabilities of people of color. While some may assume racial microaggressions are harmless, published research on student success confirms the cumulative effect of these behaviors have a deleterious influence on people of color’s sense of belonging, welcomeness to engage, self-efficacy, and success in postsecondary education. Thus, the purpose of this workshop is to introduce participants to the concept of microaggressions, discuss how microaggressions manifest in academic contexts, highlight the most common microaggressions experienced by students of color in education, and highlight strategies that have been proven effective in challenging racial microaggressions in education.
J. Luke Wood, Ph.D. is Vice President of Student Affairs & Campus Diversity and Dean’s Distinguished Professor of Education at San Diego State University. Wood also serves as the Co-Director of the Community College Equity Assessment Lab (CCEAL), a national research and practice center that partners with community colleges to support their capacity in advancing outcomes for underserved students of color.
Sponsored By:
Validating Students, Working with Cultural Strengths, and Designing a Sensing/Thinking Pedagogy – Dr. Laura Rendón
Validating Students, Working with Cultural Strengths, and Designing a Sensing/Thinking Pedagogy
Date: November 18, 2020
Laura I. Rendón, Ph.D.
Professor Emerita and co-director of the Center for Research and Policy in Education at the University of Texas San Antonio Center for Research and Policy in Education
Dr. Laura Rendón is nationally recognized as an education theorist, activist and researcher who specializes in college preparation, persistence, and graduation of low-income, first-generation students.
A native of Laredo, Texas, Dr. Rendón’s passion is assisting students who, like her, grew up in poverty with hopes and dreams but not knowing how to realize them. Dr. Rendón is credited with developing the theory of validation, which colleges and researchers have employed as a framework for working with and affirming low-income students.
Dr. Rendón is a teaching and learning philosopher and thought leader. She developed a pedagogic framework called Sentipensante (Sensing/Thinking) Pedagogy that emphasizes intellectual, social, emotional, and spiritual student development along with social activism. Click here to access the presentation recording
Click here to view the presentation slides
Funding and Sponsors
This event was the featured program of the Fall Holistic Student Supports Series and funded by a grant from Strong Start to Finish. Sponsored by the Center for Teaching & Learning and the Office of Learning Initiatives & Student Success.
Equity, Economic Mobility & Guided Pathways: The Case for Urgency and Implementation – Dr. Robert Johnstone
A Special Presentation about Guided Pathways – by Robert Johnstone, PhD
Equity, Economic Mobility & Guided Pathways: The Case for Urgency and Implementation
Our best efforts by our best people to significantly improve community college completion rates haven’t produced the scaled improvements in outcomes we’ve desired – especially for the students we most hope to serve. During this session, we’ll explore how to build on our past efforts and evolve our thinking about how students are recruited to, enter, and progress through our colleges so they complete their goals at markedly higher rates. We will begin by setting the table for an exploration of guided pathways by focusing on the issues of economic mobility and equity. This session will integrate Dr. Johnstone’s work on the Aspen Prize for Community College Excellence, Bank of America’s Jobs Initiative, American Association of Community College’s Pathways Institutes, California Guided Pathways Initiatives, Completion by Design, NCII’s A2I2 Cohort, Beyond Financial Aid, Jobs for the Future’s Student Success Centers, and numerous other national, state and college-level projects.
Wednesday, September 29, 2021, 11:00 am – 12:45 pm
Click Here to Watch the Video
View the Slides Here
Dr. Robert Johnstone is the Founder & President at National Center for Inquiry & Improvement (NCii). Dr. Johnstone works to help two- and four-year colleges create structures and processes that increase student completion, learning, and labor market outcomes. His unique and engaging approach to inquiry and improvement fuses the world of foundations, initiatives, and system-level policy changes with the ground-level work of college practitioners and college senior leaders.
Dr. Johnstone served as a director, dean, and provost in the California community college system for more than a decade, and he worked as a strategic consultant in industry prior to shifting to higher education. With more than 25 years of consulting experience in industry and higher education, he has a unique dual perspective on this work. Most importantly, he brings an energy and passion to improving lives and communities through a social justice and equity lens.
Sponsored By:
Questions?
Contact Dr. Michele Campagna
Assistant Dean, Learning Initiatives & Student Success
Michele.Campagna@sunywcc.edu
SUNY WCC Guided Pathways Student Success Achievements
SUNY WCC Guided Pathways Student Success Achievements
As we the close this academic year and celebrate our graduates, I am excited to share the attached video about our student success achievements resulting from our Guided Pathways work. SUNY Westchester Community College was among the first cohort of ten community college campuses to participate in the SUNY Guided Pathways Institutes, a current partnership between SUNY, the New York State Student Success Center, and Monroe Community College. Building on national research, led by the Community College Research Center (CCRC) and the American Association of Community Colleges (AACC), SUNY Guided Pathways has been designed to help increase completion rates and student achievement in New York State. Throughout our four years of participation at the SUNY Guided Pathways Institutes, SUNY Westchester Community College has steadily improved its student success rates. These accomplishments are the result of the creativity, collaboration, and commitment of so many dedicated people on our campus.
This is only the beginning of many more student success achievements for our campus. Thank you, congratulations, and enjoy the video!
Guided Pathways has become our student success framework. Want to learn more about Guided Pathways?