Most history textbooks provide a narrative that is filtered through the lens of the dominant culture. In this episode, Vanessa Holden joins us to discuss how the study of history can be enriched by including a wider variety of voices and perspectives in historical narratives and in our classrooms. Vanessa has a dual appointment in both the Department of History and the program in African American and Africana Studies at the University of Kentucky. Her research focuses on African American women in slavery in the antebellum South, the history of resistance and rebellion, gender history, and the history of sex and sexuality. Vanessa is the author of many scholarly publications, including the recently published Surviving Southampton: African American Women and Resistance in Nat Turner's Community. During the 2021 academic year, she was selected to be the inaugural Distinguished Visiting Scholar at SUNY Buffalo's Center for Diversity Innovation.
A transcript of this episode and show notes may be found at http://teaforteaching.com.
AI in the Curriculum
Reducing Equity Gaps
Beware the Myth
Help-Seeking Behavior
Unessays
Handbook of Online Higher Ed
Supporting Neurodiverse Students and Faculty
Alice: Finding Wonderland
Upskilling in AI
Community Effects of Incarceration
Preparing Students for an AI Future
Design for Learning
Career Readiness
Gender Bias and Timing of SETs
80 Ways to Use ChatGPT in the Classroom
ChatGPT Inspired Course Redesign
Higher Ed Then and Now
Flipped Team-Based Learning
A Return to Rigor?
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