Inclusive Teaching

 

Inclusive Teaching Source Library

Use the resources below to learn more about inclusive teaching strategies you can use to design and teach your course. 

 

Syllabi & Course Design

Amayo et al. “12 Tips for Inclusive Teaching

Ariely & Wertenbroch “Procrastination, Deadlines, and Performance: Self-Control by Precommitment

How to Use a Course Workload Estimator with Betsy Barre” (Podcast)

Course Workload Estimator

Brame, “Writing Good Multiple Choice Questions

British Dyslexia Association “Dyslexia Friendly Style Guide

Brown University, “Diversity and Inclusion Syllabus Statements

Casper, Eddy, & Freeman, “True Grit: Passion and persistence make an innovative course design work

Chi & Wylie, “The ICAP Framework: Linking Cognitive Engagement to Active Learning Outcomes

Dewsbury & Brame, “Inclusive Teaching

Eddy & Hogan, “Getting Under the Hood: How and for Whom Does Increasing Course Structure Work?

Gannon, “How to Create a Syllabus

—. “The Syllabus from a Student Perspective

Harnish & Bridges, “Effect of Syllabus Tone: Students’ Perceptions of Instructor and Course

Hogan & Sathy, “How to Make Your Teaching More Inclusive Advice Guide” 

Part I: Achievement Gap, or Opportunity Gap? What’s Stopping Student Success” (Podcast)

University of Iowa, “Syllabus Checklist” 

Waggoner-Denton & Veloso, “Changes in syllabus tone affect warmth (but not competence) ratings of both male and female instructors

Sibley, “7 Mistakes to Avoid When Writing Multiple-Choice Questions” 

Supiano, “Traditional Teaching May Deepen Inequality. Can a Different Approach Fix it?” 

Tanner, “Structure Matters: Twenty-One Teaching Strategies to Promote Student Engagement and Cultivate Classroom Equity


Grading

Allen & Tanner “Rubrics: Tools for Making Learning Goals and Evaluation Criteria Explicit for Both Teachers and Learners

Malouff & Emmerton, “The Risk of a Halo Bias as a Reason to Keep Students Anonymous During Grading

Malouff & Thorsteinsson, “Bias in grading: A meta-analysis of experimental research findings

Mollin, “Grading on a Curve Creates Toxic Competition” 

Mulliner & Tucker, “Feedback on feedback practice: perceptions of students and academics

Schinske & Tanner, “Teaching More by Grading Less (or Differently)

Talbert & Clark, Grading for Growth (Substack)

 

 

Classroom Activities, Collaboration, & Community Building

Cooper, Schinske, & Tanner, “Rethinking the Share of a Think-Pair-Share: Emerging Limitations, Alternatives, and Opportunities for Research

Feldburg-Dubin, “Top 11 Skills of an Effective Facilitator

Griffin et al. “Starting the Conversation: An Exploratory Study of Factors That Influence Student Office Hour Use

Hogan & Sathy, “8 Ways to be More Inclusive in Your Zoom Teaching” 

Kohli & Solórzano, “Teachers, Please Learn Our Names! Racial Microaggressions and the K-12 Classroom

Lang, “Small Changes in Teaching

—. “Distracted Minds: The Role of Tempo in Good Teaching

Lepper & Woolverton, “The Wisdom of Practice: Lessons Learned from the Study of Highly Effective Tutors

Nadworny, “College Students: How to Make Office Hours Less Scary


STEM-Specific Resources

Canning, et al. “STEM faculty who believe ability is fixed have larger racial achievement gaps and inspire less student motivation in their classes

Cooper & Brownell, “Coming Out in Class: Challenges and Benefits of Active Learning in a Biology Classroom for LGBTQIA Students

Freeman et al. “Active learning increases student performance in science, engineering, and mathematics

Landhuis, “Making STEM Education More Welcoming to Underrepresented Minorities

McCarthy, Abel, & Tisdell, “Community in classrooms: Practical strategies to foster engineering students’ sense of belonging

Humanities-Specific Resources

Brill, “Inclusivity in Module Design and Assessment Methods in the Humanities

Carballo, Cotán, and Spinola-Elias, “An inclusive pedagogy in Arts and Humanities university classrooms: What faculty members do

Chanock, “Towards Inclusive Teaching and Learning in Humanities: Alternatives to Writing

Collier, et al. “Inclusive pedagogy in the humanities: a workbook

 

Resources to Share with Students

ASU Office Hours Video


ASU Office Hours Video

Amayo et al. “12 Tips for Inclusive Teaching

Ariely & Wertenbroch “Procrastination, Deadlines, and Performance: Self-Control by Precommitment

How to Use a Course Workload Estimator with Betsy Barre” (Podcast)

Course Workload Estimator

Brame, “Writing Good Multiple Choice Questions

British Dyslexia Association “Dyslexia Friendly Style Guide

Brown University, “Diversity and Inclusion Syllabus Statements

Casper, Eddy, & Freeman, “True Grit: Passion and persistence make an innovative course design work

Chi & Wylie, “The ICAP Framework: Linking Cognitive Engagement to Active Learning Outcomes

Dewsbury & Brame, “Inclusive Teaching

Eddy & Hogan, “Getting Under the Hood: How and for Whom Does Increasing Course Structure Work?

Gannon, “How to Create a Syllabus

—. “The Syllabus from a Student Perspective

Harnish & Bridges, “Effect of Syllabus Tone: Students’ Perceptions of Instructor and Course

Hogan & Sathy, “How to Make Your Teaching More Inclusive Advice Guide” 

Part I: Achievement Gap, or Opportunity Gap? What’s Stopping Student Success” (Podcast)

University of Iowa, “Syllabus Checklist” 

Waggoner-Denton & Veloso, “Changes in syllabus tone affect warmth (but not competence) ratings of both male and female instructors

Sibley, “7 Mistakes to Avoid When Writing Multiple-Choice Questions” 

Supiano, “Traditional Teaching May Deepen Inequality. Can a Different Approach Fix it?” 

Tanner, “Structure Matters: Twenty-One Teaching Strategies to Promote Student Engagement and Cultivate Classroom Equity