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Upcoming Professional Development, Seminars & Speakers


U of M CRLT Players   |   Dr. Susan Kauffman   |   Dr. Frank Wu



U of M CRLT Theatre Troupe Returns to Michigan Tech


Through Performances, workshops, seminars, and individual consultations, the CRLT (Center for Research, Learning & Teaching) Theatre Program provides educators and administrators with an innovative and dynamic approach to sparking dialogue, promoting inclusivity, and effecting positive change inside and outside the classroom.

Using a solid foundation of research, the CRLT Players develop and present provocative vignettes in order to engage audience members in thinking and talking about issues of pedagogy, diversity, and inclusion in the classroom.

Sketches draw the audience into the scene with a mix of comedy, drama and occasionally music, and are designed to portray the complexities and challenges of everyday classroom situations.  Following each sketch, the audience dialogues with the actors who stay in character.  A trained facilitator guides this discussion and provides professional expertise and research-based information about the topic at hand.

CRLT Players Upcoming Presentations at Michigan Tech

  • Thursday, Sept. 14 (3:30-5:30) (RSVP to this session)
    Stories from the Maize: Voice and Visions of Diversity
    Based on interviews with students, faculty, and administrators about their personal experiences and thoughts regarding diversity at the University. This compelling production raises questions about the meaning of diversity, the complexity of identity, and what it means to be responsible for institutional change. Sketches draw the audience into the scene with a mix of comedy, drama and occasionally music, and are designed to portray the complexities and challenges of everyday classroom situations. Following each sketch, the audience dialogues with the actors, who stay in character. A trained facilitator guides the discussion and provides professional expertise and research-based information about the topic at hand. After the dialogue, the characters often repeat the sketch, incorporating audience members’ suggested changes.
     
  • Friday, Sept. 15 (8:15-10:00) (RSVP to this session)
    Tenure Sketch: The Fence
    The Fence focuses on a tenure meeting discussion at the executive committee level of a science department. The sketch poses questions regarding the fairness of some common issues and dynamics in tenure discussions and portrays the subtle ways that the gender can affect a committee’s interpretation of the candidate’s scholarship and productivity. This sketch is also part of the U-M ADVANCE project (funded by NSF).
     
  • Friday, Sept. 15 (3:00-5:00) (RSVP to this session)
    Student Conflict in the Classroom
    Focuses on a classroom conversation that suddenly turns contentious, exploring questions surrounding students’ backgrounds and conflicting perspectives, instructor responsibility, and what does or does not constitute subject-appropriate discussion in the classroom.


Dr. Susan Kauffman


Dr. Susan Kauffman is the Acting Director of the University of Michigan's Center for Education of Women, and is the author of numerous publications concerning civil rights, Women's rights and Women in education and business.  She has worked tirelessly for the education and support of Women since the late 1970s.  She is also the author of the recently published work: "The Gender Impact of the Proposed Michigan Civil Rights Initiative."

Dr. Susan Kauffman's Upcoming Presentations
  • Monday, Sept. 25 (Time TBA)
    The Potential Impact of the Michigan Civil Rights Initiative


Dr. Frank Wu


In 2004, Frank H. Wu became the ninth Dean of Wayne State University Law School in his hometown of Detroit. From 1995 to 2004, he served on the law faculty of Howard University, including two years as Clinic Director. He has been an adjunct professor at Columbia University, a visiting professor at University of Michigan, and a teaching fellow at Stanford University.

Dean Wu is the author of Yellow: Race in America Beyond Black and White and co-author of Race, Rights and Reparation: Law and the Japanese American Internment. His writing has appeared on a professional basis in such periodicals as the Washington Post, Detroit Free Press, Chicago Tribune, Baltimore Sun, Chronicle of Higher Education, Legal Times, and Asian Week.

Dr. Frank Wu's Upcoming Presentations
  • Monday, Oct. 16, Tuesday, Oct 17 (Time TBA)
    Beyond Black and White - Civil rights in the 21st Century

 



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