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Bite-Sized Inclusive Teaching Practices | Center for the Advancement of Teaching Excellence | University of Illinois Chicago
The six categories of inclusive teaching strategies are (as shown above) Belonging, Relationships, Transparency, Structure Welcoming, and the Wild Card.
Don’t Ignore Your Moral Intuition About Phones - Cal Newport
In a recent New Yorker review of Matt Richtel’s new book, How We Grow Up, Molly Fischer effectively summarizes the current debate about the impact phones and social media are ... Read more
From Class to Community: Centering Trust in Learning Spaces — UVA Teaching Hub
A collaborative classroom doesn’t happen by accident; it's created by design. Use these tools to lower resistance, foster trust, and help students learn with one another rather than just from you.
The Learning Scientists - GUEST POST: A Neuroscientific Perspective on Understanding and Managing Stress
Stress significantly impacts university students, affecting their mental and physical health. There has been a constant rise of mental illnesses reports in UK Universities over the last decade (1) – linked to high academic demands, cost of living and other financial pressures, and social challenges.
“Sending you light” felt kind to say when I heard a colleague wasn't feeling well. But I soon learned, it wasn’t what they needed. That was the moment I realized: Even our most well-intentioned words can miss the mark if we don’t ask or know what support actually looks like.
April is Neurodiversity Acceptance Month, and I’ve been learning and reflecting on how often traditional ideas of comfort, calm, and connection are built around social norms—and how that unintentionally leaves people out.
Here are two moments from last week that shifted how I show up:
💡 Sometimes people need darkness, not light.
When someone is overwhelmed—by migraines, sensory overload, or emotional exhaustion—“light” can feel like pressure. What they may need instead: rest, stillness, and silence.
🌟 Shout out to Melissa Arcand for teaching me this one!
💡Stillness doesn’t calm everyone.
After reading Karen Catlin’s “5 Allyship Actions You Can Take Today” and in conversations with panelists from Bonterra's "Neurodiversity at Work" Lunch and Learn, I realized how often we associate deep breathing and stillness with calm.
But for some Neurodiverse individuals, movement—rocking, tapping, pacing—is what regulates and soothes.
Stillness can feel like stress, not peace.
🎬Here are 5 more small shifts that can carry a big inclusion impact:
🔸 Eye contact isn’t a universal sign of respect or engagement.
Listening matters more than where your eyes land.
🔸 “This is easy” can unintentionally exclude.
Instead: “Here’s a breakdown” or “Let me know if anything’s unclear.”
🔸 Silence doesn’t mean someone’s disengaged.
It could mean they’re processing or reflecting. Give space.
🔸 Movement on camera can help some focus—but distract others.
Co-create norms: speak up, use speaker view, turn off self-view if needed. Empathy works both ways.
🔸 “Happy hours” aren’t happy for everyone.
Offer quiet, asynchronous, or one-on-one connection options too.
These may seem like small adjustments—but they’re part of building the kind of workplace where every kind of brain and every kind of brilliance belongs.
Inclusion lives in the details. Allyship lives in the questions. Empathy lives in the pause.
Let’s keep learning.
Let’s keep listening.
Let’s keep growing.
#NeurodiversityAcceptanceMonth #InclusiveLeadership #Allyship #Belonging
Page 1 of 9 - Mental health and well-being | THE Campus Learn, Share, Connect
Advice on effective mental health support for students and staff. Find out how universities and academics can protect their campus community from spiralling stress, minimise the risk of burnout and build resilience - from institutional practices that create a culture of care to personal self-care tips for overworked academics.
Recap: Understanding and Supporting Executive Function
Executive functioning skills are critical to memory, attention, organizing, and planning—among many other tasks important to learning and teaching. In a recent workshop, CETL explored how instructors
A reminder: Classrooms are neither living rooms nor trains
A recent Chronicle of Higher Education essay suggests that classrooms are nonsocial spaces where facilitating belonging is not within educators' scope of practice. We forcefully disagree.
The Neurodiversity Smorgasbord: An Alternative Framework for Understanding Differences Outside of Diagnostic Labels — Lived Experience Educator
Before I introduce The Neurodiversity Smorgasbord, I would like to acknowledge that this framework which I started to develop in 2022 has been inspired, shaped, influenced by movements that have come before as well as Mad, Disabled and Neurodivergent Indigenous and Black scholars, thinkers, writers
Disability Is Human - The Vital Power of Accessibility in Everyday Life, with Stephanie Cawthon – Teaching in Higher Ed
Stephanie Cawthon shares about her book, Disability Is Human - The Vital Power of Accessibility in Everyday Life, on episode 561 of the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast
Strategies to Support Neurodivergent Learners with Jennifer Pusateri
In today’s episode we discuss neurodiversity, terminology, and multiple strategies to support neurodivergent students in areas such as focus, attention, and motivation, organization and structure, …