Arizona State University faculty members are learning how to create and maintain places of diversity, equity and inclusion in their teaching, research and service as members of the ASU Faculty Academy.
The academy, based at the university’s Studio for Creativity, Place and Equitable Communities, welcomed its third cohort of faculty from multiple disciplines in 2022-23.
Participation in the academy helps members build skills, personal reflections and insights they can use to develop effective practices and curricula at the university, said interim studio director Chandra Crudup. Crudup is associate dean for inclusive design for equity and access at the Watts College of Public Service and Community Solutions and a clinical associate professor of social work.
The studio, a joint effort of the Watts College and the Herberger Institute for Design and the Arts, is rooted in the principles of creative placemaking and placekeeping, defined as “the strategic integration of arts, culture and community-engaged design into comprehensive community planning and development.”
Each Faculty Academy member focuses on a project of significance to their field of study and research, in an interdisciplinary peer-to-peer environment. The goal is for faculty to include themes of equitable creative placemaking and placekeeping in their teaching, research and service, Crudup said.
Crudup said the experience walks the nine cohort members through answering important questions as they build upon their existing practices. Questions include: How do we redress historical inequities? What makes a community healthy, equitable and just? What does it mean to center the culture, experience and joy of Black, Indigenous, people of color and other historically underrepresented groups in practice and pedagogy?
As senior coordinator Anna Alvarez-Loucks explains in a recent Medium post, joy and rest can be used to change systems by allowing ourselves to imagine and create new possibilities more in line with our own values.