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University of Wisconsin-Superior faculty and instructors have recently showcased their scholarly and leadership projects at the conclusion of two year-end programs: the Homegrown Scholars and Homegrown Mentorship Programs.
Thirteen faculty and instructors presented their work In May. These projects are the results of investment in UW-Superior’s people for scholarly work and journeys to become leaders.
Homegrown Scholars
- Amanda Lilly, Social Work: “Critical Roles: An experiential approach to learning about social and health determinants using a role-playing game”
- Beth Austin, Communicating Arts: “Late Work Policies and Extenuating Circumstances Discussions with Communicating Arts Instructors”
- Stephanie Warden, Natasha Schumacher, Emily Moran and Michael Merline, CLIC@JDHL team: “Instructor Perceptions of AI Text Generators”
- Priyanka Mehta, Psychology: “Is the Reading Required? Student Evaluation of Open-Access Behavioral Neuroscience Texts”
Homegrown Leaders
- Aaron Wainman: “Developing a Curriculum for TRIO McNair Pre-Scholars Program”
- Emily Wabik: “The Reconstruction and Expansion of Job Location and Development”
- Chantal Norrgard: “UWS Indigenous Alumni Speaker Series”
- Jade Jensen: “Graphic Novel Collection: Diversity Audit”
- Emilee Howland: “Writing Center Outreach: Towards Superior Campus Involvement”
- Liza Shelquist: Core Skills: “Career Readiness Across Campus”
OPID Spring Conference: Joys of Teaching
In addition, ten UWS colleagues traveled to Madison for the annual spring conference hosted by the Office of Professional & Instructional Development (OPID) at the Universities of Wisconsin.
Highlights of the conference included attending keynote and break-out sessions on topics from AI to inclusive teaching. UW-Superior was well-represented by Wisconsin Teaching Fellow & Scholars for 2023-24, Josh Stangle and Jennifer Vogler.