Past Events

A place to see past events from Advanced Career Management, Advocates and Allies, and Academy for Responsive Leadership.

Advanced Career Management

To be announced.

Advocates and Allies

Image containing a photo of a woman with graphs behind her, and text stating the date and time of the workshop: April 19, 2022 11:30-1pm

ADVANCE Equity Workshop for New Faculty

An in-person workshop facilitated by Advocates Team with A3Bas a part of the Advocates and Allies Initiative April 19, 2022

You are cordially invited to a unique and valuable conversation on diversity, equity, inclusion and sense of belonging that has the potential to impact your own working environment, but also that of your students and colleagues. In this workshop, we will present research on challenges related to faculty diversity and equity nationally and at MTU; we will also equip you with tools to create a beneficial academic climate for everyone. This in-person workshop is open for tenure-track and lecture-track faculty hired in 2020 and 2021. Lunch will be provided. Following a welcome and introduction, we will present national and MTU data on patterns of inequity in academia and explore tools and approaches we can use at MTU to improve the environment for professional success and advancement. The workshop will include small group discussions and will focus on specific issues related to Research, Teaching, and Service.

Roger Green.

Becoming An Effective Ally for Gender Equity

October 17-18, 2019

Dr. Roger Green (Electrical and Computer Engineering, North Dakota State University) and the Advocates and Allies training team of Dr. Robert Gordon (Psychology, Auburn University) and Dr. Christi McGeorge (Human Development and Education, North Dakota State University) to led a series of workshops which encourage and equip men to serve as effective allies for gender equity in STEM settings and explore the impacts of gender on women's experience of the campus climate. These workshops were hosted as a part of Michigan Tech's NSF funded ADVANCE adaptation grant.

Information slide from seminar presentation with text that reads NDSU Advance Forward, Engaging Men Faculty as Advocates and Allies for Women and Gender Equity. Roger Green PhD, North Dakota State University. Michigan Technological University, February 14-15 2019.

NSF ADVANCE Seminar: Advocates and Allies Programs in Support of Women and Gender Equity

February 14, 2019

As part of the National Science Foundation ADVANCE adaptation grant at Michigan Tech, Dr. Roger Green, Associate Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at North Dakota State University, gave an open seminar on the Advocates and Allies (A&A) Program.

Academy for Responsive Leadership

Coworkers at a table, a laptop is open with Incluxion Works text and logo on the screen. A blue box on the right side reads:University of New Hampshire PowerPlay Interactive Development.

Speaking Up: How Department Leaders Can Change the Conversation in the Academic Workplace

Have you ever asked yourself "Why didn't I say something?" when a friend or colleague said or did something that was biased or uncivil at work? You're not alone. Deciding whether and how to respond to these moments is complicated. Yet navigating these situations effectively is crucial for academic leaders—including department chairs—who are responsible for creating a respectful climate and culture for everyone in their units.
Limited to just 50 attendees, this dynamic and interactive workshop will teach you what motivates individuals to speak up, the challenges people face when doing so, and strategies for responding that invite self-reflection and constructive dialogue. Attendees will then be invited to apply these strategies directly to resolving everyday incidents of incivility and bias that frequently occur among faculty and staff in the academic workplace.
The discussion will focus on academic leaders' role in changing the conversation to promote inclusive and respectful workplaces. A team of experienced co-facilitators and professional actors will support active discussion and learning to reinforce using these skills beyond the workshop.

Preparation for Leading in DEI Work for Your Team

Dr. Candy McCorkle, VP of Diversity and Inclusion, Western Michigan University, will introduce participants to some of the competencies necessary for effectively engaging in diversity, equity and inclusion work. The five basic skills will be explored and demonstrated how to use them to build the foundations of effectively engaging in diversity, equity and inclusion work.

On The Line- Interactive Theatre

On The Line is a performance and workshop focused on a living case study that interactively engages participants on ways they can mitigate bias and equity in tenure and promotion practices. In the first half of the workshop, professional actors portray a subtle and complex scenario involving a department's executive committee formally discussing whether one of their junior colleagues should be awarded tenure. Post-show interaction, guided by a facilitator, allows audiences to unpack issues and practice interventions. Most recently, On The Line was presented as a plenary for deans as part of the American Society for Engineering Education Equity, Diversity, and Inclusions Conference in New Orleans, at SFU, and Oregon State.

(dis)Credit: Erasure and Scrutiny of Women in STEM

Women in STEM face simultaneous invisibility and hypervisibility in settings of all types across academe. Over time, patterns of omission in citation or ideas unacknowledged in meetings have a cumulative effect. Many consequential decisions from grant funding to hiring to tenure and promotion rely formally or informally on these inequitable patterns of recognition and reward. At the same time, women are frequently subjected to increased scrutiny in evaluation and review, from hiring and job performance to funding and publication. Increasingly women in STEM are subjected to targeted harassment via social media that can traumatize scholars, their families, and colleagues. Women's experiences of invisibility and hypervisibility are shaped by race, class, disability, gender identity, sexual orientation, immigration status, and other types of difference, producing distinct inequitable effects. How can we work together to disrupt these patterns of inequity that mark sexist academic STEM cultures? How can we come to terms with root causes in order to structure processes and practices to more effectively counter systemic injustice?

Michigan Tech is a globally recognized technological university that educates students, advances knowledge, and innovates to improve the quality of life and to promote mutual respect and equity for all people within the state, the nation, and the global community.

MTU Strategic Planning Framework for DEIS