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Bonus: Conference to Restore Humanity! Overview image

Bonus: Conference to Restore Humanity! Overview

Human Restoration Project
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16 Plays3 years ago

In this bonus episode of Human Restoration Project's podcast, we talk about all of the fantastic opportunities available at our upcoming Conference to Restore Humanity! 2022: System Reboot, which is entirely online from July 25th-July 28th, 2022. We detail:

  • The goals and reasoning for establishing the conference, including pedagogy, sustainability, accessibility, and representation
  • The keynotes, learning tracks, and additional events
  • The purposeful design for ensuring everyone can participate and be informed through the conference (and why traditional conferences don't work for everyone)
  • ...and other reasons why a virtual-first conference model is not only needed, but necessary

If you're interested in attending, early bird pricing ends really soon from this recording - June 30th! You can sign up at any point at humanrestorationproject.org/conference

Recommended
Transcript

Adapting education during the pandemic

00:00:00
Speaker
At the beginning of the pandemic, schools reacted to the needs of communities in much the same way as other institutions, by building a plane in mid-flight whose purpose was to navigate us to a post-pandemic normalcy.
00:00:11
Speaker
Teachers leaned into new dual roles as viral mitigators and classroom educators, preparing safe learning environments for kids attending in-person instruction, and navigating new remote learning environments, often simultaneously.
00:00:25
Speaker
But as one headline observed in June 2020, the coronavirus didn't break America.
00:00:31
Speaker
It revealed what was already broken.
00:00:33
Speaker
As we saw how the impact of the pandemic fell hardest on communities of color, disabled people, and children ineligible for vaccinations, so too,
00:00:42
Speaker
Did the coronavirus reveal the same disparities in accessibility and sustainability of our instructional models of school?
00:00:49
Speaker
This temporary on-the-fly response to the pandemic, characterized by hours of camera on, Zoom lectures, breakout rooms, and lockdown browsers, has now incorrectly become solidified as our mental model for remote school that was exhausting and dehumanizing for students and teachers alike.

Innovations and opportunities in remote education

00:01:08
Speaker
But the early lockdowns forced another realization.
00:01:12
Speaker
With millions under lockdown, many non-disabled people are experiencing for the first time how it feels to have external barriers preventing you from participating in everyday life.
00:01:23
Speaker
Public and private spaces overcame years of unresponsiveness to disabled people to broadly and quickly accommodate pandemic life.
00:01:31
Speaker
Tens of millions of workers transitioned to work from home, with 91% wanting to retain remote flexibility.
00:01:39
Speaker
Online shopping options proliferated to support local businesses.
00:01:43
Speaker
Telehealth visits safely aided overburdened health systems.
00:01:47
Speaker
And entertainment moved in home as Broadway stage shows, musical acts, and Hollywood blockbusters streamed online to support artists and performers.
00:01:56
Speaker
There's even evidence that reduced travel, temporarily curbed carbon emissions, and reduced air pollution in early 2020.
00:02:04
Speaker
Now we have the opportunity and understanding to move from emergency pandemic remote school and its pantomime of learning to purposefully designed online education spaces that are accessible, sustainable, and representative of the communities they serve.
00:02:20
Speaker
It's time for the academic conference model to respond accordingly.

HRP virtual conference announcement

00:02:35
Speaker
Hello everyone and welcome to a June bonus update here from HRP.
00:02:40
Speaker
Just talking about the things that we're doing as an organization, the things that we're excited about, and hopefully things that you all can get involved with, with Human Restoration Project.
00:02:49
Speaker
First off, big announcement I think from both of us that's been a game changer is that Nick and I are now full time.
00:02:56
Speaker
We are basically working around the clock in order to promote progressive education, grow the movement.
00:03:01
Speaker
and on all the things that we're going to go through here today.
00:03:04
Speaker
What you just heard was Nick summarizing the need for our conference model.
00:03:11
Speaker
Nick, do you want to talk a little bit about the conference?
00:03:13
Speaker
So our conference to restore humanity, if you haven't heard about it yet, and you're just turning into this podcast, it's going to be taking place July 25th through the 28th, and it's going to be entirely virtual.
00:03:26
Speaker
So
00:03:26
Speaker
The big reason why we wanted to build a conference model that looked like good examples of good remote instruction that we've been talking about for the last couple of years with the pandemic, for precisely those reasons that I listed in the intro, it's accessible from a
00:03:44
Speaker
a broad range of health perspectives, especially in terms of travel, flying conditions and things being what they are today and the risks still of the coronavirus, especially for susceptible populations.

Conference design and accessibility features

00:03:56
Speaker
I know, you know, I've got a four-year-old son and we're overjoyed right now to be eligible for the vaccine for under fives.
00:04:03
Speaker
So that, you know, might begin to change the conversation to going forward, but we're not there yet.
00:04:09
Speaker
The sustainability part of it comes in as well, where we understand the impact of travel, both in terms of people's individual finances.
00:04:19
Speaker
Oftentimes, travel to these conferences is prohibitively expensive.
00:04:23
Speaker
Again, not just in terms of airfare, but of accommodations.
00:04:27
Speaker
You got to get a hotel room.
00:04:29
Speaker
You have to pay for meals and things like that.
00:04:31
Speaker
So
00:04:32
Speaker
The sustainability part of virtual conferences is important for us as well.
00:04:37
Speaker
Plus, the accessibility part for people with disabilities would say oftentimes in those in-person spaces, they're not set up for people with mobility issues or three processing disorders for people with hearing.
00:04:52
Speaker
hearing loss or other audio visual impairments, in the virtual space, we can at least provide more accommodations for the broadest number of people kind of using those universal design principles.
00:05:07
Speaker
So providing transcripts and providing videos of our keynotes, hosting it all in that virtual online space allows people at different processing rates and speeds and times to
00:05:19
Speaker
to engage with that content asynchronously as well.
00:05:22
Speaker
Kind of the last part of that too is just understanding what we know about digital pedagogy now two years into a pandemic where we've been living in that space is, well, why not build a model for what this virtual classroom space could be?
00:05:38
Speaker
I already mentioned the keynotes.
00:05:40
Speaker
With your conference registration, you'll get the keynotes in advance.
00:05:44
Speaker
So we've already got, for example, the circle keepers from Harvest Collegiate High School.
00:05:49
Speaker
I think it runs about 45 minutes.
00:05:51
Speaker
We previewed that.
00:05:52
Speaker
It's incredible.
00:05:53
Speaker
But you'll have time to go through and watch it at whatever speed you want to.
00:05:58
Speaker
We're working on transcripts for the keynotes as well.
00:06:01
Speaker
So you'll have...
00:06:02
Speaker
You know, you'll have the written transcript for, you know, for screen readers and things to go through it as well.
00:06:07
Speaker
But on the pedagogical side of it, too, the best part of conferences is often not the keynote lecture or those kinds of things, but it's the discussion, the conversation that happens afterwards and the Q&A with the presenter.
00:06:19
Speaker
So that's where that flipped model for keynotes really provides a leg up, we think, from in-person conferences, because, you
00:06:27
Speaker
You're going to get access to that information ahead of time for you to process, bring your questions to the Q&A with Dr. Denisha Jones or Henry Giroux or the circle keepers.
00:06:37
Speaker
I mean, the only thing I would add is just I think at the center of any good design and good pedagogy means that even though this is more accessible for everyone that's involved,
00:06:48
Speaker
It in general is just a better design model for learning, no matter who you are.
00:06:53
Speaker
I mean, personally, I do not like going to a conference, waiting for the keynote, spending like two hours in that room, just listening and listening.
00:07:00
Speaker
They could be a great, engaging speaker.
00:07:03
Speaker
But like, I want to move around.
00:07:04
Speaker
I don't want to just be sitting there.
00:07:06
Speaker
And also it just helps me focus.
00:07:07
Speaker
Like I'm the kind of person I like to hear things over and over again.
00:07:10
Speaker
I like to have that transcript behind me.
00:07:13
Speaker
It's a model that makes sense for teachers.
00:07:15
Speaker
It's cheap.
00:07:16
Speaker
You don't have to pay for the hotel.
00:07:17
Speaker
You don't have to pay for, you know, transportation, all the things that you mentioned before.
00:07:21
Speaker
You could be listening to the keynote and doing your dishes, just hanging out.
00:07:25
Speaker
It's very low barrier to entry, which in a time where we're all pretty burnt out,
00:07:31
Speaker
is a good thing to kind of restore that sustainable practice model.
00:07:35
Speaker
And then also, it's just a way that you can learn easier and engage with an audience better.
00:07:41
Speaker
So in terms of the flip keynote model, that means that you're having an hour to discuss these topics in a Q&A style, as opposed to having to sit there and listen and then have that five minute Q&A at the end.
00:07:55
Speaker
You're like, man, I wish I could have asked them that.
00:07:58
Speaker
It's like you could go after batch words, but then there's like always a line.
00:08:01
Speaker
It's just it doesn't make any sense.
00:08:03
Speaker
And with that, too, I mean, the question, the Q&A is going to be better as a result.
00:08:06
Speaker
People have had time to process and.
00:08:09
Speaker
You know, to come up with those questions and think deeply about what somebody just said, instead of having to react or respond to it right away, you know, on the plus side too, then the presenter is more engaged in the Q&A and not having just delivered an hour long speech and then having to put that energy into being responsive

Diverse topics and representation in education

00:08:27
Speaker
to that too.
00:08:27
Speaker
So yeah.
00:08:28
Speaker
you know, it kind of levels the playing field, I think, for everybody in terms of that.
00:08:32
Speaker
And then the thing I like about that as well is that stuff will be there forever.
00:08:38
Speaker
So you'll have access to that if, you know, our conference is at the end of July and school for you, whether, you know, you're approaching this from the student lens or from an educator lens, K-12, higher ed, if you're going back to school at the end of August and you're like, man,
00:08:52
Speaker
You know, I heard something at the conference that I wanted to reference again or bring into my own coursework to help onboard students into these practices.
00:09:00
Speaker
You can go back and reference those vids.
00:09:02
Speaker
You can reference those discussions.
00:09:03
Speaker
You can reference the conversations that are happening inside the learning tracks.
00:09:08
Speaker
Yeah, I'd like to talk to just about the idea that just because this is a remote conference, we did want it to be human centered.
00:09:15
Speaker
We still want to have those human connections.
00:09:18
Speaker
It's not just watch some videos and take an online course.
00:09:21
Speaker
It's not.
00:09:22
Speaker
Instead, we have a tech space system where folks can jump in and talk to each other.
00:09:26
Speaker
They'll be in groups and they can discuss as they're going through these different courses.
00:09:29
Speaker
There'll be different spaces that people can participate in voice chat and interact with each other.
00:09:34
Speaker
It's not just an online course.
00:09:37
Speaker
These tracks, the way that they work is every day you'll be given various different interactive activities, readings, discussions, very similar to the sheets that you tend to get handed out to you at any workshop that you go to at a conference.
00:09:52
Speaker
So you'll have access to these different materials for the course.
00:09:55
Speaker
We're anticipating it being about two hours worth of stuff every single day.
00:09:59
Speaker
That way you have, you could start in the morning, end up in the afternoon and finish it.
00:10:03
Speaker
You do it all at once in the evening, entirely up to you.
00:10:06
Speaker
And that chat will be there that you can interact with at any point during the day and learn about some, in my opinion, very radical pedagogy in a very, in a positive light.
00:10:16
Speaker
I see radicals a good thing.
00:10:18
Speaker
We have disrupting discriminatory linguistics, which gets into language justice and how students can be discriminated based off the language that they use, like whose languages do we police and how do we counteract that?
00:10:29
Speaker
And how do you teach a course where you don't police language?
00:10:32
Speaker
Because at least in my teacher training, that's been a big part of
00:10:36
Speaker
what you do.
00:10:37
Speaker
We have building anti-carceral practices, which dives into the carceral state.
00:10:42
Speaker
Probably many people are familiar with the school to prison pipeline.
00:10:45
Speaker
The carceral network expands upon that and talks about just constant surveillance in ways that especially students of color are policed.
00:10:53
Speaker
But it also gets into disabled students, LGBTQIA students, all students, right?
00:10:59
Speaker
that are able to recognize the many different ways in which we over police our schools, both from a literal cops in schools, but also just teacher practices and pedagogy.
00:11:10
Speaker
So our third track dives into Neurodivergence.
00:11:13
Speaker
It's designed by Stimpunks, which is a nonprofit focused on designing for just that.
00:11:18
Speaker
That's called DIY at the Edges.
00:11:21
Speaker
And essentially what you'll be doing is learning about how do I design a space that is for all learners in the classroom?
00:11:27
Speaker
And I think there's kind of a meta component to this because a lot of the things that we're doing at the conference are kind of like how you designed for also neurodivergence.
00:11:36
Speaker
So you'll get to be taught it while also experiencing it and seeing the benefits that arrives for you.
00:11:42
Speaker
And then finally, our fourth main track dives into childism.
00:11:47
Speaker
And it's led by the Childism Institute at Rutgers.
00:11:51
Speaker
Childism is akin to feminism, so it's standing up for students' rights, as opposed to adultism, which would be akin to racism.
00:11:59
Speaker
So it's discriminating because someone isn't old enough.
00:12:01
Speaker
Saying things like, you say that just because you're a kid, or like, what do you know?
00:12:05
Speaker
You're so young.
00:12:07
Speaker
Acting like students can't do something just because they're younger and using certain language that might discriminate against them in a way that prevents them from achieving their goals.
00:12:16
Speaker
So the goal of this is to realign yourself and thinking about how many rights students have and how can we build a space where students do have rights.
00:12:25
Speaker
And what that looks like in terms of empowerment and sharing power.
00:12:29
Speaker
Finally, we have a track that's available for all participants that everyone will have access to.
00:12:33
Speaker
And that is feedback first education, which is being offered by Floop, which is the only ed tech tool that HRP has ever endorsed.
00:12:42
Speaker
Floop is a tool that allows you to offer feedback on student work.
00:12:47
Speaker
without giving a grade.
00:12:49
Speaker
It's a true gradeless feedback tool.
00:12:52
Speaker
And in the session, you'll be learning about how do you offer feedback in a way that's meaningful, how do you build a gradeless classroom, and how do you build a space where students are continually motivated and engaged by improving as opposed to feeling judged or discriminated against.
00:13:08
Speaker
So those are all five tracks.
00:13:10
Speaker
So you know for the tracks portion, you'll be choosing one of these four tracks, then everyone will have access to the fifth track.
00:13:17
Speaker
I think what you're getting at there, Chris, right, to bring it back to this framing around the demand for a conference model that is accessible, sustainable, and representative of the communities, education is meant to serve.
00:13:29
Speaker
So if we're meant to serve students, how often do you have student representatives talking about their work at educational conferences, right?
00:13:37
Speaker
The Harvest Collegiate Circle Keepers won the third of our keynotes.
00:13:42
Speaker
is going to be a rather large student group engaged in social justice, restorative justice work, right?
00:13:48
Speaker
How often do we talk about neurodivergence or universal design for learning or disabled people without having them represented in those spaces?
00:13:59
Speaker
And here we have a track that is actually about neurodivergence, talking about people who are neurodivergent and identify people
00:14:07
Speaker
as such, and are building how to help mitigate barriers to entry for them, but also help move them into those spaces.
00:14:15
Speaker
How often do we talk about issues facing kids without framing them in the sense of childism, or talk about the school-to-prison pipeline without specifically addressing anti-carceral practice?
00:14:28
Speaker
So again, it's about building that model that is accessible, sustainable, and
00:14:33
Speaker
representative and hearing from people who are actively engaged in that work, whether there are keynotes or part of our individual learning tracks.

Fair compensation and conference structure

00:14:42
Speaker
And I think last thing surrounding the conference, and it's kind of an awkward but blunt thing to talk about that I think as we're sharing, which is we wanted to design a conference where the folks that are presenting and preparing materials for us are valued for their time and effort.
00:14:58
Speaker
The reason why we're charging for this conference is that there's no free labor.
00:15:02
Speaker
We are paying folks a competitive rate.
00:15:04
Speaker
for preparing these tracks and for speaking at our keynote.
00:15:07
Speaker
HRP is likely not going to make any money off of the conference.
00:15:11
Speaker
I don't know if we need to put that part in there, but it's true.
00:15:14
Speaker
The goal of this is to ensure that folks are not signing up to speak at our conference for that toxic exposure piece.
00:15:21
Speaker
So by participating in this conference and contributing to it, you are directly contributing to the folks that are making these tracks and speaking at the keynotes and knowing that they are being valued for their time.
00:15:30
Speaker
In addition, so every day, the structure, of course, going from Monday, July 25th through Thursday, the 28th, each day we'll have the different keynote speaker and you'll be working, of course, through your track at the same time.
00:15:44
Speaker
But then each day we'll actually have a smaller event.
00:15:48
Speaker
I think these are scheduled to be about an hour.
00:15:50
Speaker
And these will just be more synchronous conversations.
00:15:54
Speaker
But we put together a progressive education panel discussion with what schools could be podcasting.
00:16:00
Speaker
The next day on the 26th, we've got a conversation with David Buck, who has led the ungrading hub on Discord.
00:16:07
Speaker
We'll have his ungrading con on Twitter in the fall.
00:16:09
Speaker
but on expanding and growing progressive education.
00:16:12
Speaker
On Wednesday, we'll have the power of narrative mathematics with Sunil Singh.
00:16:17
Speaker
Probably he'll talk about in there about teaching math as a humanities course, which is an idea that obviously as a humanities educator is fascinating to me.
00:16:25
Speaker
But then the last day will be then, how do we continue the fight with Dr. Jennifer Berkshire?
00:16:31
Speaker
She will join us to kind of have closing discussion about like, how do we take this energy?
00:16:37
Speaker
How do we take the ideas?
00:16:39
Speaker
And how do we move back into our world and into our individual context post-conference and continue the fight and continue to make change?
00:16:47
Speaker
So yeah, in addition to the keynotes and in addition to
00:16:52
Speaker
those learning tracks, those daily events are going to just kind of be pop-up events that you can come in and participate.
00:16:57
Speaker
Or, you know, if you don't have the time or the availability, you can, you know, listen to the understanding from after the fact is
00:17:04
Speaker
So I think to summarize, the goal again of this conference is to value folks time and to ensure that everyone has a seat at the table.
00:17:10
Speaker
You'll be able to participate in four days of learning and then access it after the fact for however long it will always be there.
00:17:18
Speaker
You'll be able to every single day watch a keynote video that's roughly a half hour to an hour long.
00:17:24
Speaker
You'll watch it, learn from it, take some notes, maybe brainstorm a few questions.
00:17:27
Speaker
You'll get to work through your tracks at your own pace, your learning track for roughly two hours each day.
00:17:33
Speaker
And then finally, there'll be two live events every single day.
00:17:36
Speaker
There'll be one at 11 a.m.
00:17:39
Speaker
Eastern, which is the keynote Q&A, which is the response to the video, which will be recorded as well.
00:17:45
Speaker
as well as a second event, like kind of a mini event that's an hour long, that will vary in time each day, somewhere between 1 and 6 p.m.
00:17:53
Speaker
Eastern.
00:17:54
Speaker
Those will also be recorded.
00:17:56
Speaker
So you'll have the ability to access all these different things at any real point.
00:17:59
Speaker
It's as accessible as possible.
00:18:02
Speaker
If this sounds exciting and energizing and innovative and you want to join us or you want to support us in bringing you this conference and support the wonderful group of presenters and
00:18:18
Speaker
track leaders that we were able to assemble here, you can go to our website, humanrestorationproject.org slash conference, and you can find more information there about the schedules, about the format, about the keynotes, tracks, and all of that.
00:18:33
Speaker
And of course, then you can register
00:18:35
Speaker
for the conference there.
00:18:36
Speaker
So the early bird price is $150 and we're going to sunset that at the end of June, then which the regular ticket price will be $200 for the month of July and leading up to the conference as well.
00:18:49
Speaker
So get on that as early as you can to take advantage of that early bird pricing and we'll hope you join us.
00:18:55
Speaker
And we should note too that there are discounts available for folks that are from historically marginalized communities.
00:19:01
Speaker
There is a discount code that's available at the bottom of the page that will give you a discount to the conference, as well as there are group rates available.
00:19:10
Speaker
So if you are a school or institution, you want to send a group of three or more, we can give you a pretty hefty discount and send a bunch of folks there.
00:19:21
Speaker
Conference to Restore Humanity is an invitation for K-12 and college educators to engage in a human-centered system reboot, centering the needs of students and educators toward a praxis of social justice.
00:19:34
Speaker
The traditional conference format doesn't work for everyone.
00:19:37
Speaker
It's costly to attend, environmentally unfriendly, and it doesn't allow everyone to engage or have a voice in the learning community.
00:19:45
Speaker
Our conference is designed around the accessibility and sustainability of virtual learning while engaging participants in a classroom environment that models the same progressive pedagogy we value with students.
00:19:56
Speaker
Instead of long Zoom presentations with a brief Q&A, keynotes are flipped.
00:20:01
Speaker
and attendees will have the opportunity for extended conversation with our speakers, Dr. Henry Giroux, the founding theorist of critical pedagogy, Dr. Denisha Jones, educator, activist, and co-editor of Black Lives Matter at School, and the Circle Keepers from Harvest Collegiate High School in New York City, a student collective focused on social justice.
00:20:22
Speaker
And instead of back-to-back online workshops, we are offering asynchronous learning tracks.
00:20:27
Speaker
You can engage with the content and the community at any time on topics like anti-carceral pedagogy, disrupting linguistic discrimination, designing for neurodivergence, promoting childism in the classroom, and supporting feedback over grades.
00:20:42
Speaker
The Conference to Restore Humanity runs July 25th through the 28th.
00:20:46
Speaker
And as of recording, early bird tickets are still available.
00:20:50
Speaker
It's $150 for four days with discounts available for individuals from historically marginalized communities, as well as group rates.
00:20:58
Speaker
Plus, we'll award certificates for teacher training and continuing education credits.
00:21:03
Speaker
See our website humanrestorationproject.org for more information and let's restore humanity together.