These resources are more effective when used in conjunction with the book.
Buy NowGlossary: Chapter 11: Social Justice Education Online
Asynchronous teaching/learning: Forms of education, instruction, and learning that do not occur in the same place or at the same time, and participants are able to engage the materials and work on their own schedule.
Synchronous teaching/learning: Forms of education, instruction, and learning that occur in the same “space,” at the same time.
Learning Management System (LMS): A software application for the development, administration, documentation, tracking, and delivery of educational courses, training programs, or learning and development programs.
Hybrid course: Courses that include both face-to-face and online learning experiences.
Hyflex course: A Hybrid-Flexible or HyFlex course is student-centered and integrates face-to-face instruction, online synchronous sessions, or asynchronous content delivery. Students are able to choose which modality they prefer to participate in the class.
Open Educational Practices (OEP): The open sharing of pedagogies and teaching practices. Includes Open Educational Resources.
Open Educational Resource (OER): Teaching and learning materials that are in the public domain or are created under an open license and are freely available for educational use and adaptation.
Techquity: Using education technologies in culturally responsive ways to promote educational equity.
Teaching online:
Darby, F. (2020). How to Be a Better Online Teacher: Advice Guide. The Chronicle of Higher Education, 1–38.
Miller, M. D. (2014). Minds Online: Teaching Effectively with Technology. Harvard University Press.
Stavredes, T. (2011). Effective Online Teaching: Foundations and Strategies for Student Success. Jossey-Bass.
Boettcher, J. V., & Conrad, R.-M. (2016). The Online Teaching Survival Guide: Simple and practical pedagogical tips (2nd ed.). Jossey-Bass.
Teaching Online. https://teaching.cornell.edu/learning-technologies/designing-online/teaching-online
Winfield, J.K. To sync or async: Considerations for access in virtual learning. https://www.ecampusnews.com/2020/05/04/synchronous-learning-access/2/
Asynchronous Strategies for Inclusive Teaching. https://www.brown.edu/sheridan/asynchronous-strategies-inclusive-teaching
Burgstahler, S. 20 Tips for Teaching an Accessible Online Course. https://www.washington.edu/doit/20-tips-teaching-accessible-online-course
Rabidoux, S. & Rottmann, A. 5 Tips for ADA-Compliant Inclusive Design. https://www.insidehighered.com/digital-learning/views/2017/05/03/tips-designing-ada-compliant-online-courses
Teaching & Learning in the Diverse Classroom Online Course. https://teaching.cornell.edu/programs/faculty-instructors/workshops-and-other-opportunities/teaching-learning-diverse-classroom
Foundations for Excellence in Teaching Online. https://www.edx.org/course/foundations-for-excellence-in-teaching-online
Online Equity Rubric. https://web.peralta.edu/de/equity-initiative/equity/
Dell, C. A., Dell, T.F., Blackwell, T. L. (2015) Applying universal design for learning in online courses: Pedagogical and practical considerations. The Journal of Educators Online-JEO, 13(2). 166-192. https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/EJ1068401.pdf
Ten steps toward universal design of online courses. Little Rock Disability Resource Center. https://ualr.edu/disability/online-education/
Chapter 11: Social Justice Education Online
Chapter 11: Social Justice Education Online
Chapter 11: Social Justice Education Online
Chapter 11: Social Justice Education Online
Chapter 11: Social Justice Education Online
Name of Activity: Asynchronous Group Guidelines for SJE Online
Instructional Purpose Category: Tone setting / developing group guidelines
Instructional Purpose:In teaching social justice education online, it is important to create a learning community among the participants and the facilitators. This community should be a challenging, yet safe-enough space for participants to actively engage in learning about social justice. Creating a space for introductions helps set the tone that everyone in the group matters, and begins to build a cohesive learning community. This activity creates space for the development of community agreements about learning together online. It also should address expectations around technology uses.
Learning Outcomes:
Time Needed:10-20 minutes, depending on the amount of collaborative processes dedicated to the activity.
Materials Needed: An app that allows for collaboration. Google Docs is an easy and free app to do this activity.
Degree of Risk: Low to medium
Procedure: It can be helpful to include some preliminary guidelines for participants. Depending on the amount of time available for this activity, providing a preliminary list can also save time in the overall design.
Ask students to identify guidelines that would help them participate in the learning community. If there is a substantive preliminary list, students can be asked to comment on or reflect on the provided list. Some baseline guidelines might include:
Facilitation Notes & Considerations:
After a list is finished, include a reflection process for students in which they:
List of asynchronous options for online icebreakers, brief introductory activities, and closing activities.
Meme Generator:
Having students create and then share a meme in response to a prompt can be a fun and humorous way to check in. Because of the tendency for memes to use sarcasm and humor, we recommend that this be used for low-stakes topics and prompts. A currently available meme generator available is: https://imgflip.com/memegenerator/79793910/All-to-easy
Polls and the Results:
Polling students on a simple question or prompt and then sharing the results from the whole group can both give the facilitator an informal assessment and let participants see the different reactions of the members of the learning community.
Introductory selfie videos:
A selfie video is a short (30-60 second) video where participants introduce themselves. They could be asked to share some of the following:
Subsequently, they are asked to watch all of the videos and add affirming comments to others’ videos.
Online biographies:
Students can create online biographies for themselves. These biographies can also be done creatively, such as students choosing music or art to share something about themselves. If the group is beginning to get into higher stakes topics, the biographies can include social identity information or information about their social justice experiences. Subsequently, students should read the biographies and post affirming comments on others’ biographies.
Though asynchronous learning does not always have an end point or traditional guidelines in the same way scheduled synchronous session and F2F learning does, it is still important to bring closure to parts of the design.
Closing Word Cloud:
Participants can be asked to share a word or phrase that represents their reaction to a part of the design or a take-away from a part of the design. These words/phrases can be added to a word cloud (such as: https://www.jasondavies.com/wordcloud/), and the word cloud shared with the group. To circle back on the process and bring even more closure, participants can submit their personal reflections on the word cloud.
Closing Affirmations:
Similar to F2F social justice education, offering the space for participants to give each other affirmations can be a hopeful and positive way to wrap up a design. Participants can be tasked with giving a certain number of affirmations, and these can be posted in an LMS or in a collaborative document.
Chapter 11: Social Justice Education Online
This web resource provides guidance for creating recorded lectures that include active learning components.
Name of Activity: Self-Reflective Learning through Digital Storytelling
Instructional Purpose Category:
Exploring internalized oppression, internalized messages, or implicit bias
Processing / debriefing the process
Exploring privilege
Instructional Purpose:Digital storytelling is the creation of a short video that conveys aspects of the creator’s story using video clips, images, audio, text, or voiceover. These digital stories can reflect their unique perspectives and interests, and offer an opportunity for self-reflection in the SJE design.
Learning Outcomes:
Learning outcomes can be tailored to specific topics, such as a specific social identity, processing the process in the design, or reflecting on internalized oppression.
Time Needed:Time needed varies based on the experience participants have had with the technology. Generally, most creators need multiple hours to collect their digital materials and create a video with them.
Materials Needed:
Participants will need to gather their digital materials, which will vary for each individual.
A free, open source app, such as shotcut (www. shotcut.com) can be used to create the videos. Also, many devices come with basic video editing apps that can be utilized, as well.
Degree of Risk:
Medium to high
Procedure:
Facilitation Notes & Considerations:
This is a time-consuming project, and might be better conceptualized as a long-term project over several weeks, rather than a one-off activity.
Recommended Materials/Readings for Students:
Recommended Supplementary Materials/Readings for the Facilitator:
Bell, L. A. (2010). Storytelling for social justice : connecting narrative and the arts in antiracist teaching. Routledge.
Name(s) to credit for this activity:
Name of Activity: Timeline of an ism
Instructional Purpose Category:
Exploring institutional-level oppression
Exploring cultural- or societal-level oppression
Exploring history
Exploring liberation and social action
Instructional Purpose:This activity allows students to collectively explore the history of an ism.
Learning Outcomes:After this activity participants will
Time Needed:90 minutes
Materials Needed: Online application for creating timelines, for example www. Sutori.com. If these websites are too steep of a learning curve, Google Slides can be used, and participants can put the slides in the correct order, like a gallery walk timeline.
Degree of Risk: low to medium risk
Procedure:
Facilitation Notes & Considerations:
Recommended Materials/Readings for Students:
Consider assigning short texts about the history of the ism to scaffold this activity.
Name(s) to credit for this activity:
This activity was adapted from : Davey Shlasko and Hillary Montague-Asp Chapter 9: Ableism and Disability Justice
Name of Activity: Spheres of influence for SJE online
Instructional Purpose Category:
Exploring liberation and social action
Developing action plans
Instructional Purpose:
This activity gives participants a framework for understanding their own circumstance and how they might affect social change within their own social circles, interpersonal lives, workplaces, and communities.
Learning Outcomes:After this activity participants will
Time Needed:15-25 minutes
Materials Needed:
Digital copy of the Spheres of Influence handout
A collaborative technology, such as a table in a Google Doc, where participants can share
Degree of Risk: Low-medium
Procedure:
Facilitation Notes & Considerations:
Be sure to allow enough time for each part of this asynchronous activity.
Recommended Materials/Readings for Students:
Johnson, A. (2018). What can we do? Privilege, power and difference (3rd ed., pp. 107-134). McGraw Hill.
Name of Activity: Cycle of socialization for online SJE
Instructional Purpose Category:
Early learning / socializations
Exploring internalized oppression, internalized messages, or implicit bias
Instructional Purpose:Introduces participants to the concept of socialization to understand privilege and systemic oppression.
Learning Outcomes:After this activity participants will
Time Needed:20-30 minutes (split between adding examples to the cycle and reflecting on the cycles)
Materials Needed: Digital handout of Harro’s cycle of socialization figure; technology in which participants can add text to the cycle, such as Google Slides
Degree of Risk: Medium
Procedure:
Facilitation Notes & Considerations:
Recommended Materials/Readings for Students:
Harro, B. (2018). The cycle of socialization. In M. Adams, W. Blumenfeld, D. C. J. Catalano, K. “S”. DeJong, H.W. Hackman, L.E. Hopkins, B.J. Love, M. L. Peters, D. Shlasko, & X. Zúñiga (Eds.), Readings for diversity and social justice (4th ed., pp. 27–34). Routledge.
Recommended Supplementary Materials/Readings for the Facilitator:
Harro, B. (2018). The cycle of socialization. In M. Adams, W. Blumenfeld, D. C. J. Catalano, K. “S”. DeJong, H.W. Hackman, L.E. Hopkins, B.J. Love, M. L. Peters, D. Shlasko, & X. Zúñiga (Eds.), Readings for diversity and social justice (4th ed., pp. 27–34). Routledge.
Most icebreakers, introductory activities, and closing activities used in the F2F can easily be used during a synchronous video session, such as on Zoom. This list has activities that focus on engaging participants’ bodies and physical spaces.
Contemplative practice: Noticing your senses:
Invite participants to notice or write down:
Debrief questions:
What is on your feet?
This light-hearted check-in asks participants to share what is currently on their feet. It brings attention to our physical bodies and grounds us in our bodies by simply asking them to share:
Answers can be shared one-by-one verbally, or shared in the chat function.
Sharing about your space
As an introductory activity, students can be asked to share details about their space, as a way to ground them physically and also to bring awareness to the differing circumstances and experiences of other participants. Participants can be asked to share some of the following:
What are you doing next to take care of yourself?
The majority of F2F closing activities are appropriate for synchronous sessions, as well. As Zoom (and other video conferencing) forms norms around how we show up on the screen, this activity brings awareness to our bodies and what our bodies need after a synchronous session. This can be accomplished by asking students what they plan to do next to take care of themselves. Because this could potentially be high-stakes for some participants, you can either frame it as asking them to choose something that they want to share with the group, or asking them to write it down and then taking volunteers who want to share.
Name of Activity: Common Ground (synchronous) for SJE Online
Instructional Purpose Category:
1. Icebreakers
3. Tone setting / developing group guidelines
Instructional Purpose:The purpose of this activity is to provide participants with the opportunity to explore commonalities and differences around a particular topic and to begin to establish a more personal framework for participants to understand the topic being discussed. This synchronous, online adaptation demonstrates a creative use of currently available video conference technologies.
Time Needed: 15–20 minutes
Materials Needed: List of statements and link to a digital copy for participants
Degree of Risk: Low-risk; varies depending on statements
If conducting this activity via a digital platform such as Google Meet or Zoom, instead of forming a circle and having participants step in/out, have participants turn on/off their cameras or have students use an emoji reaction such as a “raised hand” to “step in” to the circle.
Consider the current process goals for your group and the impact different choices might have. Having students turn cameras on for statements might provide a nice visual. However, not all participants are “camera-ready” (see Chapter 11: SJE Online for more details about accessibility issues around turning cameras on for video chats). Doing hands raised emoji might feel lower risk or allow more people to participate. In Zoom, it helps to ask everyone to do gallery view.
Before beginning the activity, first ask students to practice responding to a statement that allows everyone to turn on their cameras or raise their emoji hand. For example, the statement “turn on your camera if you are currently on this Zoom call.” This statement would apply to everyone and is low stakes for a practice round.
Explain that as statements are called out, the participants for whom the statement is true will turn on their camera/raise their emoji hand, wait a moment to notice who else also did, before moving on to the next statement.
Depending on the topic, risk level, and group, the facilitator may invite the participants to make up other categories as you go or invite the participants to call other categories that apply to them.
For a list of introductory statements, see the Common Ground activity from Chapter 4.
Specific to SJE online, facilitators can include several statements about learning online or technology usage. For example:
Thank the participants for participating.
To debrief, students can collaboratively share their reactions to the activity in pairs or small break out groups:
In additional to these questions, for online learning, facilitators might want to ask questions about being online during the activity, such as:
Facilitation Notes & Considerations: This activity can be used as a low-risk icebreaker, a medium-risk bonding activity, or a high-risk conversation starter. Gauge your use of this activity depending on how well the group knows each other and the goals of the session. Depending on the issues addressed in the activity, the participants may be asked if they have a statement to add. In some cases, the facilitator may direct the participants to offer only statements that apply to themselves (i.e., ones that they will “step in” for). With high-risk topics of discussion such as gender-based violence, it is not recommended to ask the participants for additional statements.
For medium- or high-risk activities, more debriefing will be necessary. The facilitator may instruct the participants to do a pair-share or small-group debrief following the activity. Additional questions might include: What did you notice as you and others were going in and out of the circle? What surprised you? What was uncomfortable for you? What was comfortable? If the activity is used as a discussion starter, it may be helpful to provide copies of the statements after the activity is completed in order for participants to reference back to them. When doing this online, higher stakes topics may feel different for participants to be online rather than in person, as well.
Online considerations:
Note and draw out participants' commonalities as well as differences. Probe to ask what patterns they noticed about their community. Take the emotional temperature of the room to see if participants are experiencing feelings of guilt, shame, embarrassment or perhaps anger, frustration, and despair.
Recommended Materials/Readings for Participants: None
Recommended Supplementary Materials/Readings for the Facilitator: None
Name(s) to credit for this activity:
Adapted from Chapter 4, Rani Varghese and Ximena Zuniga
Name of Activity: Synchronous Activity: Annotating Readings
Instructional Purpose Category: This activity can cover a range of topics, depending on the readings used for it.
Instructional Purpose:This synchronous activity uses a social platform (such as the currently available perusall.com) to collaboratively engage the readings. Some annotation apps can be integrated directly into an LMS. Annotation apps offer a way for students to develop their knowledge and reflection skills together on a technology that is not just a discussion board. Large groups can be broken into smaller groups for this activity. Perusall, for example, allows the instructor to choose the size of the groups, and then groups only see their group’s annotations.
Learning Outcomes:After this activity participants will:
Time Needed:15-25 minutes (if participants have already read the texts)
Materials Needed: An annotation application, such as perusall.com. There are currently a number of free alternatives available online
Degree of Risk: Low-high risk, depending on the readings and the prompt questions utilized.
Procedure:
Provided are some examples of directive and specific prompts to illustrate. There is a range of risk levels in these prompt, as well:
Facilitation Notes & Considerations: When debriefing this exercise, facilitators should find a way for group members to share what they learned from this activity. For example, in a collaborative table in a Google Doc, each participant can share one “take away” about the activity; or, participants can be asked to share low-stakes reflective writing about their reactions to reading their small group members’ annotations.
Name of Activity: Web of Oppression (synchronous) for SJE online
Instructional Purpose Category: Choose one or more of the following categories that represent the main purpose of the activity; this is how activities will be cross-referenced on website.
Exploring institutional-level oppression
Exploring individual/interpersonal-level oppression
Exploring cultural- or societal-level oppression
Exploring internalized oppression, internalized messages, or implicit bias
Terminology /exploring language
Instructional Purpose:The purpose of this activity is to digitally create a visual representation of the otherwise overly abstract concept of a social system or culture and the interlocking forms of oppression within social institutions.
Learning Outcomes:Participants will be able to conceptualize and understand some of the ways in which systemic oppressions interlock within social institutions at the individual, interpersonal, cultural, and societal level.
Time Needed:30-45 minutes
Materials Needed: Examples of individual/interpersonal, institutional, and cultural or societal manifestations of singular and/or intersecting oppression(s) that can be accessed remotely by all participants; an application that allows for multiple people to add lines to a digital whiteboard (such as the whiteboard Zoom or a Google JamBoard);
Degree of Risk: low to medium risk
Procedure: Prior to this activity, participants should have completed a reading, informational video, or activity where the levels of oppression have been clarified.
In lieu of throwing a ball of yarn, like in the F2F activity, participants can connect lines within a circle on the digital platform. Participants can then call on the next person, who says their example, connects their line across the circle, as well, to make a web-shape. This continues as each persona share their institutional example of disadvantage, exclusion, marginalization or discrimination.
To debrief, note that the web represents the complexity of systemic oppression and is a visual representation of the abstract concept of oppression in social institutions.
Facilitation Notes & Considerations:
Recommended Materials/Readings for Students:
Recommended Supplementary Materials/Readings for the Facilitator:
Name(s) to credit for this activity:
Adapted from Chapter 4: Core Concepts, Ximena Zuniga and Rani Varghese