Philadelphia, PA, USA
5 days ago
Adjunct - CIVC101

About Lindy Center for Civic Engagement

Drexel University is committed to becoming “the most civically engaged university in the United States,” encouraging students, staff, and faculty to be responsible members of their local and global communities and to use their skills to address societal issues with the goal of improving quality of life for everyone. The Lindy Center for Civic Engagement, located within the department of University and Community Partnerships, is a driver of this mission on campus by providing opportunities for students, faculty, and staff to learn and think critically about social issues, engage with communities through service, academic experiences, and relationship-building, and reflect on their capacity to make change.

The Lindy Center for Civic Engagement’s mission is to foster a culture of civic responsibility by providing programs and resources that empower Drexel students and the broader university community to expand their civic identities through engagement in mutually-beneficial partnerships that lead to a more just society.

Job Summary

CIVC 101: Introduction to Civic Engagement is meant to be students’ first educational experience in their civic engagement journey. The curriculum, maintained by the Lindy Center for Civic Engagement and taught by adjunct instructors, gives students a basic understanding of the broad definition of civic engagement and invites students to critically examine key concepts related to civic and community engagement, including identity and social location, community, and systems of power. As a Community-Engaged Learning (CEL) course, students not only learn and discuss concepts in class but also put them into practice by engaging with each other and their communities and reflecting on the deeper meanings of their classroom and community experiences. The course relies heavily on sociological and social justice concepts—recognizing that social issues are systemic and related to identity, social groups, power, and privilege.

Consistent with the mission and vision of the Lindy Center for Civic Engagement and the University’s goals, below are the learning outcomes for this course. Student will be able to:

Define civic engagement and community engagement and key concepts such as identity, community, and systems of power. Practice skills related to civic engagement (self-awareness, relationship building, dialogue, reflection, etc.) in real-world situations through direct community engagement.  Identify social issues connected to direct service at a community partner, and be able to identify and critically examine additional social issues in class. Envision their own identity as an active, engaged, responsible citizen.  Recognize how effective individual actions can affect social change. Identify examples of power and privilege and be able to explain their impact in everyday life.

CIVC 101 is a 1-credit course that takes place for 50 minutes once per week. There are several sections offered each term at different times during weekdays and weekday evenings. Adjunct instructors generally teach one section per term and they can choose the time of the section based on their availability. The course is taught face-to-face on Drexel’s main University City campus and generally enrolls a maximum of 50 students.

Essential Functions

Attending one training before teaching the course, and ongoing workshops, community-building events, and/or one-on-ones with the Lindy Center staff (generally 2-3 events per term in addition to the training) Completing all necessary hiring paperwork Ensuring the course learning outcomes are met by following the given syllabus and lesson plans provided by the Lindy Center and communicating any potential changes with the AD Attending and teaching the course once a week throughout the term Collaborating with a Course Assistant who can support course facilitation, classroom logistics, and student assessment. Grading all student assignments and participation – includes submitting final student grades within 48 hours of the final exam, maintaining accurate documentation of course records, and assisting the Lindy Center with any student grade disputes Available to students outside of class and responding to student emails and Lindy Center communications in a timely fashion

Required Qualifications

Minimum of a Bachelor's Degree. Intermediate understanding of course concepts, including social justice, identity, power, privilege, systemic inequality, equity, oppression, discrimination, etc.  Commitment to creating inclusive, equitable, anti-racist classroom environments that center and reduce harm to marginalized students. Commitment to student support and growth, which includes assessing students as individuals and showing compassion while holding students accountable. Experience facilitating workshops, classes, or other interactive sessions Ability to mentor and collaborate with an undergraduate Course Assistant Desire to participate in and contribute to the community of adjuncts, course assistants, and staff members who comprise the CIVC 101 team

Preferred Qualifications

Experience facilitating discussion course concepts, including social justice, identity, power, privilege, systemic inequality, equity, oppression, discrimination, etc.

Location

University City, Philadelphia PA

Special Instructions to the Applicant

In addition to your CV/resume and cover letter, please upload letter of application outlining industry experience, relevant teaching/mentorship experience, portfolio (if applicable), sample syllabus (if applicable).

Review of applicants will begin once a suitable candidate pool is identified.

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