Posted on April 11, 2022

Our guest today is Dr. Nicole Scalissi, Assistant Professor of Contemporary Art History within the College of Visual and Performing Arts here at UNCG.  Our conversation today focuses on how to apply EDI practices in the classroom with students.

Link to full transcript here.

Music, A Short Walk, from Zapsplat.com

Quote from the Episode

“Find ways to include students in the very fabric of the course.”

About our Guests

Dr. Nicole F. Scalissi

Nicole F. Scalissi is a historian of modern and contemporary art and her research focuses on issues of identity, equity, and violence in the contemporary United States and at its borders. Her current book project focuses on contemporary performances and interventions by Latinx and Afro-Latinx artists that trace the relationships between identity, violence, and media in the contemporary United States. She is an affiliated faculty in UNCG’s Afro-Latin American/Latinx Studies Project. 

Resources from the Episode

Additional Resources

  • When to Call Someone Out or Call Them In Over Racist Behavior by Tiffany Jewell 
  • Author Tiffany Jewell  is a writer, anti-racist educator and consultant. Her book, The Book is Anti-Racist is often categorized as for teens, but it’s for everyone! 
  • Loretta J. Ross is a professor, activist, and public intellectual on why Cancel Culture is “Toxic” (for which Call-in culture is an antidote) and an New York Times piece on her work “What if Instead of Calling People Out, We Called Them In?”
  • “Interrupting Bias: Calling Out vs. Calling In” via Seed the Way: Education for Justice and Equity
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