With the support of the Academy of Marketing, and the Marketing Trust, this free, one-day workshop, hosted at Leicester Castle Business School, De Montfort University, welcomes early career researchers and PhD students who have a strong interest in curriculum decolonisation
You will have ample opportunities to discuss, understand, and challenge, some of the core issues that will continue to impact the ways that we work within academy and beyond. The workshop will embed a practical activity that will run as a thread across all of the speakers’ segments, which will provoke thought and discussion.
Participants will learn to rethink a current curriculum by learning how to dismantle and rebuild pedagogic content. The workshop will encourage participants to create an inclusive curriculum and reflect on choice of teaching materials, incorporating the lived experiences of those in the classroom setting, in addition to strategies for enhancing learning and facilitates effective co-creation practices.
Through the incorporation of global viewpoints, and a push for a wider understanding of the curriculum being taught, participants will have gained practical ideas that can be directly applied to their own modules.
Core Areas:
- Why decolonisation is important?
- What materials are being used and why?
- How is the material being used important within the teaching?
- What is the background of the material being used?
- How to include lived experiences?
- Research informed teaching, why is it needed?
- Understanding the student demographic within a classroom
- Disruptive pedagogy, what is it?
- Exploring unconscious bias and why is it important?
ECRs and PhD students who are relatively new to teaching and have limited experience of curriculum design. The workshop will be open to participants from any institution. A small budget will be put aside to help subsidise travel where required. There will be an expectation that participants bring their own laptops.
Activities planned for participants:
A teaching curriculum will be sent to all participants as part of the pre-workshop preparation. This preparation work will allow participants to think about initial ideas in relation to decolonising a curriculum. Additional work on this document will form part of the workshop activities.
Number of participants:
A maximum of 40 participants in person and 30 participants online.
Details of invited speakers:
Carl Jones – Senior Lecturer, Westminster School of Media & Communications
Carl W. Jones is a bilingual, multicultural “tradigital” communications professional. His content creation for clients has generated millions of dollars in earned media. Selected one of the Top 20 Canadian Creative Directors by Strategy Magazine, also he became the most awarded Art Director in the Mexican advertising industry. Carl was nominated for "Excellence in Teaching" at OCAD University, Toronto, and Nominated twice for University of Westminster Student Union UWSU Staff Appreciation Awards. In total he has won over 500 awards and recognitions for his advertising messages, and academic career, including Cannes Lions.
Professor Momodou Sallah - Professor of Teaching and Learning/Director, Centre for Academic Innovation at De Montfort University
Prof. Sallah (PhD, MPhil, MA) is the Director, for the Centre for Academic Innovation, and a Reader in Globalisation and Global Youth Work at De Montfort University, UK. He is also a founding Director of Global Hands, which is a Social Enterprise/Charity operating in The Gambia and UK, with a focus on capacity building and social good. In June 2013, he was awarded a National Teaching Fellowship by the UK Higher Education Academy.
Melanie Crofts – Associate Professor in Law, Decolonising DMU
Melanie is Associate Professor (Teaching). Her main areas of teaching are Criminal Law and Gender and the Law. Melanie's areas of interest/research are discrimination, equality and diversity, Critical Race Theory, Critical/Radical Pedagogies. Melanie devotes herself to the Decolonising DMU movement and leads the staff work stream. Melanie was invited to run a workshop looking at institutional discrimination in Higher Education at the University of Lincoln and delivered the keynote address at the London School of Business and Management Learning & Teaching Conference in 2018. She took part in a symposium on Gendered Experiences of Research at the University of Chester and has chaired the Government Events conference on 'The Future of Equality, Diversity and Inclusion In The Workplace 2019'.
Contact Details:
For any questions or queries, please contact the organisers at the e-mail addresses below:
Amelia Roberts (Senior Lecturer in Marketing, De Montfort University) [email protected]
Dr Jen-Hsien Hsu (Lecturer in Marketing, University of Leicester) [email protected]