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      • A 'plan of possibilities' is an alternative to the concept of a daily lesson plan
      • A closet is something you construct to claim the privilege of other identities at the expense of a marginalized identity.
      • A good warm-up activity before starting group discussion is to have students finish a leading sentence with their own thoughts
      • A language is a dialect with an army and a navy.
      • A project or agenda doesn't have to be named and outlined first; it can emerge
      • A resume could take up two pages instead of one, but it had better be worth the extra reading
      • A short quiz can function as an entrance ticket to a discussion class and encourage students to prepare the material beforehand
      • A slopegraph is similar to a line graph, but each category would have its own row
      • A square area graph visualizes data points as little squares in a larger square pattern, highlighted with different colors
      • A study of Pakistani university students reported a significant majority of students copying the work of other students
      • A thought on organizing a digital garden
      • A time-efficient strategy in obtaining qualitative feedback from students is to sample students slightly above and slightly below the average proficiency
      • Ableism and racism are inseparable.
      • Academic culture varies around the world.
      • Academic language is a product of white colonial norms and similarly tries to avoid racial emotions
      • Academic skills transfer when new languages are acquired.
      • Accepted practice can have racial biases.
      • Acquiring language through communication is superior to isolated drills
      • Acquiring new modes of communication comes naturally when the person has clear and internally motivated reasons for doing so
      • Acquisition of white languaging does not fit the pre-academic English preparation course sequence timeline
      • Active learning lessons can be designed with three steps.
      • All grading systems are political because of the inherent power dynamics
      • All of a person's linguistic ability is combined into a single linguistic repertoire
      • Allow students to help constructing norms for a respectful and productive learning environment
      • Althusser's interpellation or hailing is an unconscious process that turns something into a subject by calling attention to it and expecting a response
      • American society threw disabled people under the bus during COVID.
      • An anxiety graph can be used to reflect on the changes in anxiety level for a given situation over time.
      • An asset-based mindset views students as people to support rather than objects to measure.
      • An engagement trigger is something done in the beginning of a lecture that gets students thinking about and applying recently learned knowledge
      • Anonymous grading cannot prevent reference to the norm within the class which may introduce a bias towards a white racial habitus
      • Anonymous grading reduces implicit bias when grading student work
      • Anti-blackness is a distinct but related concept from white supremacy.
      • Anti-Cheating Education Software Braces for AI Chatbots
      • Anxiety can change students' study habits
      • Anxiety can result in careless errors during language production
      • Anxiety changes how students attempt to interact in the language
      • Anxiety changes how students perceive the language
      • Anxiety is a major obstacle to learning a foreign language
      • Anxiety makes easier tasks easier and harder tasks harder
      • Any complex system that has survived was built from simpler systems that have proven their value.
      • Apoliticality is a feature of the white habitus.
      • Applying visual design principles increases data comprehension.
      • Article for CTC
      • Asao Inoue argued for community-based assessment; a system of grading that combines teacher and peer student evaluations using rubrics
      • Asking students to write about themselves in the beginning of the semester can help you get to know them better
      • Assessment is political.
      • Audience perception follows a few basic rules.
      • Audiences made up of different types of people can trigger speech anxiety.
      • Avoid charts with multiple axes
      • Avoid commenting on students' discussion to allow them the space to express themselves
      • Avoid keeping notes on multiple platforms
      • Avoid overusing buzzwords on your resume especially without evidence of application.
      • Avoiding cognitive load helps the audience process the information.
      • Basic visual design principles facilitate understanding data charts
      • Being able to tell a story with data is a skill that needs to be learned and does not come naturally to those who work with data
      • Being unable to graduate college has a significant negative impact on students career prospects and job satisfaction
      • Being white is not the same as having a white racial habitus.
      • Benefits of modern technology often have a K-shaped distribution.
      • Bi-directional documents should focus on a centered or symmetrical alignment for text
      • Biases are never completely erased, but can be weakened over time with effort
      • Booker T. Washington
      • Both digital and hand-written notes can be effective with training
      • Both specific and general populations should be studied to be most effective.
      • Build community by offering to do what you want to do for others.
      • Building community within the classroom is essential to avoiding implicit bias and developing an asset-based mindset
      • Capitalist frameworks don't work in markets where the focus is on use-value and worth
      • Capitalist societies devalue labor power in favor of capital to gain an advantage over a population
      • Capture notes widely and use a discovery process to find notes on specific topics
      • Case studies give language students opportunities to discuss real situations.
      • Center for Worker Justice
      • Chartjunk is extra decoration on a chart that does not communicate information about the data
      • ChatGPT in Higher Education
      • Christina Ortmeier-Hooper
      • Circumstantial bilingualism is the idea that a person may be proficient in English for specific situations, but less capable in others
      • Civil attention is the appearance of paying attention and participating in discussion while the person is not actually listening
      • Classroom and homework activities can affect students' self-perception and self-efficacy
      • Co-constructing the rubric with students helps them provide better feedback to their peers
      • Color-blindness reinforces underlying white-centeredness.
      • Commonplace books were used to record all the interesting things the author read or thought
      • Communication apprehension also has negative effects in the workplace.
      • Community care is just as important as self-care
      • Community makes reading sacred
      • Community-based assessments are centered on the racialized habitus of the community.
      • Community-building is a form of activism.
      • Comparing what students do with what you were expected to do when you were in college is an unconscious dog whistle, or red flag, for enforcing habits of white languaging, and through it, white supremacy
      • Compassionate listening is a technique used to support someone processing a traumatic experience.
      • Complex visual inputs are normally processed in a zig-zag pattern, starting with the upper left, moving to the right, then down to the bottom left, and to the right
      • Consider providing group discussion questions to students before the discussion to help guide their focus when reading the material
      • Contract grading puts emphasis on the processes that lead to learning and acquisition rather than the products
      • Conventional assessment ecologies value habitus more than learning
      • Copyright theft is a universal approach to technical inequity between nations.
      • Correcting non-treatable errors are less effective in helping students avoid errors in the future
      • Correlations with socioeconomic status often mask the true cause of social problems.
      • Coursework is less helpful than projects when writing a resume
      • COVID-19 forced the world to experience life through a disability lens.
      • Creating a safe and effective learning environment is crucial for supporting class discussions
      • Creating a video that explains the rubric and shows examples can help students better understand how the rubric will be applied
      • Crip doulaing is the mentorship of someone established in disability culture towards a newly disabled person.
      • Criterion-reference assessments can easily become norm-referenced when the standard is not applied blindly
      • Critical discussion skills are a core part of any college education
      • Critical Language Awareness explores the intersections of language and power
      • Critical thinking and argumentative learning objectives are best assessed through peer-to-peer discussion
      • Criticisms of community-based assessment include failing to equalize power dynamics, as well as gender and racial biases
      • Cross-disciplinary approaches are linked with higher productivity and creativity.
      • Cultural differences in student-faculty interaction is a challenge for students unfamiliar with the academic culture.
      • Cultural differences in the way healthcare works is a challenge for healthcare students unfamiliar with the culture
      • Cultural integration is a stressful endeavor.
      • Culture creates emotions rather than individuals
      • Culture shock is disrupted social support.
      • Curriculum Vitae
      • Data presented with clear visualization and narrative communicates actionable insights more effectively
      • Data sources
      • Deaf gain is an asset-based approach to deafness.
      • Deficit-based approaches are inherently ableist.
      • DEI can be prioritized using the triage method.
      • DEI programs often miss opportunities to improve their organizations.
      • DEI workers may have blind spots for their own biases.
      • Descriptive phenomenology seeks to find common features of a sample of described experiences.
      • Design choices should be made deliberately
      • Developing a growth-mindset correlates with increases in GPA and success rates for disadvantaged students
      • Different modes of language acquisition facilitate skill development in different ways.
      • Different personality types handle different modes of learning differently.
      • Disability communities often need to develop their own preparedness strategies and mutual aid networks.
      • Disabled wisdom is the skills to survive challenging situations.
      • Discussion skills like articulating, defending, and providing evidence for an idea are what helps us learn
      • Dispassion is an ideal of white masculine habitus.
      • Distributed leadership increases employee's emotional investment in the organization
      • Dominant academic discourses are white habits of language
      • Don't be afraid of silence during group discussion, as often quieter students are waiting for their chance to speak
      • Education is never ideological neutral.
      • Effective communication centers around a single main idea.
      • Effective organizational change often comes from the ground up rather than imposed from the top down
      • Efforts at social change should be targeted more towards women and children.
      • Efforts to support one group of students can further marginalize others.
      • Emergent bilingual as a descriptor for students who speak another language and are learning English focuses on the assets they bring to the classroom
      • Emotion is contextual and non-essentialist
      • Emotionally charged issues have potential to bring people together or tear them apart.
      • Emotions are artifacts of a culture expressed by an individual in a context
      • Emotions emerge in the process of meaning-making and in interactions with other people
      • Empathy is not enough.
      • Empathy is prone to bias.
      • Employers routinely use subtle discriminatory language in job postings.
      • Enclosures are parts of the classroom ecology that categorize, sort, restrict, and define students
      • Engaging in reflection on multiple iterations of their work helps students understand the nuances of rhetorical choices and how they translate into writing
      • English-only policies in schools are very common and have negative consequences for students
      • ESL students are being ideologically trained to accept their position as low-wage workers
      • ESL students face additional challenges when listening to uninterrupted lecture
      • ESOL students fare better when they are prepared for for-credit college courses, especially in terms of the reading demands involved
      • Ethnic enclaves are associated with less access to mental health services
      • Even negotiated grading contracts can easily be functionally unilateral
      • Even students who speak only English often speak a variety of dialects of English besides the academic standard
      • Even well-intentioned attempts to support multilingual students are often deficit-based
      • Evidence against gender essentialism also comes in the fact that, across cultures, what it means to be of a specific gender is different
      • Evidence does not support the idea that communication apprehension can be reduced through skills training alone.
      • Evidence of the effect that anxiety has on language learning is mixed.
      • Executive positions are overwhelmingly held by white people.
      • Exemplar categorization is the process of comparing an instance of something with an easily identified example in memory.
      • Experiences that align with our habitus are more valued than others.
      • Explicitly calling attention to important points during a lecture can help cue students to take notes
      • Exploring data on technology usage can identify gaps in students access and knowledge of critical tools
      • Expository writing can increase your audience.
      • Faceting can make it difficult to compare the values of faceted groups
      • Faceting plots avoids the overplotting problem
      • Faculty can help students build networks of support outside of the classroom.
      • Faculty have the responsibility of understanding the culture of their students
      • Faculty need to advocate for inclusion of plurilingual perspectives into competency-based curriculum
      • Failing to acknowledge non-standard dialects is a form of implicit bias
      • Fear and anxiety are similar but distinct emotional states.
      • Fear of speaking is the most reported fear in the United States.
      • Feedback and discussion of plagiarism examples proved more effective at helping students avoid plagiarism than feedback alone, or feedback with additional examples
      • Feedback on content was found to be more effective than feedback on grammar and sentence structure
      • Feelings of community and belonging reduces acculturation stress in international and resident immigrant students.
      • Ferris suggests that different types of errors can be learned from differently
      • Finding a Ph D program
      • First-generation college students are half as likely to graduate on time compared to other students
      • For dominant talkers, thank them for their enthusiasm, and ask for someone else to speak
      • Forcing students with different language backgrounds into English language classes reinforces deficit thinking of multilingual students
      • Free recall test items promote retention better compared to multiple choice or recognition
      • ggparty is an R package to help arrange multiple plots together
      • Give students time to prepare their thoughts before launching into a group discussion
      • Giving students the freedom to use all of their language resources develops agency while building skills in multiple languages.
      • Good class discussions are planned but often seem spontaneous
      • Good class discussions put students in charge of the conversation.
      • Good communication should have multiple intermediate levels of detail
      • Good group discussion design has a few key steps.
      • Government funding has the potential to control non-profit organizations that depend on it.
      • Grades are a coercive mechanism that are often mistaken for intrinsic motivation
      • Grades are an indirect measure of learning
      • Grades move students through manufactured and hierarchical positions to give a sense of reward and investment
      • Grading contracts are a useful tool in reducing bias and adopting an asset-based mindset towards learners
      • Grading contracts can range from entirely unilateral agreements to fully negotiated between teacher and students
      • Grading is a practice that sets students up to adopt docile habits
      • Grammar acquisition is a gradual process and does not respond to traditional instruction methods.
      • Group discussions at the start of class set the tone for active learning and participation for the whole session
      • Group discussions ideally have four members
      • Guide students to the right conclusion instead of chiming in ourselves
      • Habitus can be hard to confront because it has been naturalized and made invisible
      • Habitus is a system of cultural values, mores, norms, and language shared by a group of people.
      • Harklau studied the transition of ESL students from high school to community college
      • Harriett Tubman
      • Have clear objectives of the kind of work you want to do in your resume
      • Having empathy for students is the real key to reducing bias
      • Headers, chart titles, and slide titles should be direct and to the point
      • Heavy borders on tables distract from the data
      • Help students build networks of support in the community
      • Higher education institutions use a policy of segregation and assimilation when it comes to language diversity
      • Hiring managers and recruiters should be able to quickly tell where they would want to place you from your resume
      • Holding students to high standards of attendance is based on a false idea of working environments
      • Horizontal bar charts are easier to read than vertical ones
      • How emotions are defined is different across cultures
      • Hue is a preattentive attribute used with qualitative information
      • Humility is a valuable trait.
      • Hybrid grading contracts still uphold a racialized cultural-linguistic standard because they grade based on the perception of language quality
      • Hybrid-grading contracts, as used by Danielewicz and Elbow, fail to avoid the bias and judgement of white racial habitus
      • Hybrid-grading contracts, as used by Danielewicz and Elbow, unintentionally reserve the highest grades for students who adopt a white racial habitus
      • Hybrid-grading contracts, as used by Danielewicz, and Elbow, refer to using two sets of criteria for students above and below a default grade
      • I'm searching for that line between teaching English as a language and teaching a white language habitus
      • Icebreaker Activities
      • Ida B. Wells-Barnett
      • Ideal class discussions have a supportive framework but flexible to respond to student input
      • Ideological neutrality in education only serves to support the current dominant ideologies.
      • Ideologies are constructed to support people's impulses.
      • If not careful in their approach, administrators can erode multilingual students confidence in the school system and promote deficit-thinking among faculty
      • If possible, show evidence of following through on projects on your resume
      • If you have multiple degrees or certifications on your resume, only show the most recent
      • Immigrant and refugees should be considered vulnerable populations as research subjects.
      • Immigrant communities in Johnson County face several challenges.
      • Immigrant labor is exploited by US companies.
      • Implicit bias is a preference that is not under our conscious control.
      • Imposter phenomenon is the feeling of being unfit or unwelcome in a specific situation.
      • In a labor-based ecology, writing can be measured by the number of words or pages produced and reading can be measured by the number of pages or words read
      • In a negotiated assessment ecology, male and white students are more likely to defend their work which therefore introduces a gender and racial bias in the grading system
      • In some cultures it is standard practice to use the words of educated and enlightened figures
      • Innovation and adaptation can become blocked by traditional leadership strategies
      • Inoue defines languaging as a gesture coming from our habits of mind
      • Inoue's labor-based grading contracts hold writing quality central to the course without affecting the final grade
      • Insistence on Academic English privileges those with experience with that dialect in the home
      • Instead of letting advanced students opt-out, consider working with them to set a more personalized contract
      • Instead of letting students opt-out, consider working with them to set a more personalized contract
      • Instructional design could benefit from knowledge management strategies
      • Insufficient language acquisition results in poor academic performance
      • Integration must be a priority for the academic success of all students
      • Intentional cohorts of immigrant students can support each other through the difficult road of higher education
      • Inter-rater reliability increases when the raters share habitus, but this also has consequences for students with different habitus.
      • Inter-rater reliability is always less than ideal because each rater has a different set of exemplars of the variables being assessed.
      • International students are less acquainted with Western academic culture
      • International students are less confident in their ability to accurately reference source material
      • International students often choose majors that they are not interested in
      • Inviting students to apply the rubric to an example, a peer's assignment, or their own, can help them better understand how the rubric will be applied by the instructor
      • Iowa Senate File 481 gives the state power to withhold funding from cities that go against state legislation.
      • Irreducible notes promote development of thought networks
      • It can be difficult to adequately label such a diverse group as linguistic minority students
      • It can be helpful to grade anonymously first and then provide individualized feedback with the student's identity in mind
      • It can be helpful to look at graded assignments again to make sure the same standard is being applied
      • It helps to provide links to your projects or organizations that you've worked for
      • It is a challenge to categorize linguistic minority students
      • It is dangerous to ignore the ideologies inherent in TESOL
      • It is estimated that over a third of the United States population will be first and second generation immigrants by 2065
      • It is important for faculty to understand the cultural backgrounds of their students and how it affects their academic life
      • It is important to have language to discuss and understand racism.
      • It is important to set expectations with students about the kinds of questions to ask during a group discussion
      • It is important to understand the secondary to post-secondary transition of linguistic minority students.
      • It is more valuable to create knowledge than to consume it
      • It takes a long time to achieve academic proficiency in a subsequent language.
      • It's a good idea to stop and ask students if you are speaking too fast or slow
      • It's common for students to start out a semester evaluating themselves highly and having a more realistic self-evaluation as the semester progresses
      • It's easy to convince oneself that taking notes is not necessary
      • It's important for dominant talkers to take away the understanding that listening is important; and not that we want them to stop talking
      • It's important that discussion rubrics assess a student's ability to connect ideas to course concepts
      • It's important to communicate our access needs.
      • It's important to consider students' attitudes towards independent styles of learning before implementing them in the classroom
      • Jigsaw activities give students the opportunity to construct knowledge on their own
      • Johnson County offers support to new immigrants.
      • Journal of Higher Education Policy and Management
      • Judgements of language quality in any grading contract give rise to Stoddardian dikes; a racialized grading apartheid.
      • Judgements of writing quality say more about the reader's bias than the quality of the writing
      • Just as there are plural Englishes that float around a nexus of core linguistic features, there are plural whitenesses
      • Kaiping Peng
      • Kanno and Harklau paved the way for new research on the success and challeneges of linguistic minority students
      • Kanno and Varghese call on higher education administrators to focus their policies on all barriers to linguistic minority student success rather than only linguistic challenges
      • Keep the number of elements in a graph to less than 4 to avoid cognitive overload
      • Kerry A. Enright
      • Knapp's assessment ecology is a hybrid grading system that uses judgements of writing quality to produce a grade, albeit minimal
      • Knowledge work that critically interprets information is not likely to be automated any time soon
      • Labor is connected to the physical body, whereas labor power is the combination of labor and time that a person can trade
      • Labor power inherent in a writing assignment grows as it goes through the writing process
      • Labor-based contract grading supports students as they take risks in their academic work
      • Labor-based grading practices link assessment with pedagogy making them one in the same
      • Lack of agency can be a stressful condition.
      • Language Anxiety
      • Language is a cultural artifact.
      • Language is learned through a racialized habitus and we make the mistake of assuming all students have adopted a white racial habitus
      • Language learning anxiety is a distinct form of anxiety.
      • Language learning destabilizes one's worldview and sense of self
      • Language repertoires are not collections of discrete language competencies, but they are combined into a single plurilingual repertoire
      • Languages can differ widely on how they categorize things and events.
      • Languages other than English should be viewed as assets rather than deficits.
      • Learned helplessness is the idea that a person can withdraw from social activities when they feel unable to predict whether their action will result in positive or negative reactions.
      • Learned helplessness may explain some cases of communication apprehension.
      • Learning and acquisition are distinct neurological processes.
      • Learning anxieties act as a vocational filter for the people most likely affected by them.
      • Learning contracts are different from grading contracts in that they focus on achieving specific learning outcomes
      • Learning contracts can have agentive and metacognitive benefits, but still leave grading instructor-controlled
      • Learning contracts have been focusing on process and metacognition for awhile, but Inoue takes it further to tie grading into it as well
      • Learning to visualize and narrate the data can also help you focus on the problem at hand rather than getting overwhelmed with the details
      • Length is a preattentive attribute used with quantitative information
      • Less than a quarter of linguistic minority students transition from high school to a 4-year college.
      • Linguistic DEI in Higher Education
      • Linguistic diversity is present in the classroom whether it is an ESL course or a course full of native English speakers
      • Linguistic imperialism is a form of ableism.
      • Linguistic minority students and academic dishonesty
      • Linguistic minority students are disadvantaged compared to linguistic majority students due to their fluency with an effective form of cultural capital
      • Linguistic minority students are often not as visible as other minority groups such as large ethnic minorities and international students
      • Linguistic minority students can be challenged by higher rates of poverty
      • Linguistic minority students can feel isolated within the institution
      • Linguistic minority students do not have the same representation in higher education as other groups
      • Linguistic minority students face a unique set of challenges.
      • Linguistic minority students in higher education
      • Linguistic minority students must be supported by all areas of the institution rather than be delegated to a minor department of language specialists
      • Linguistic minority students' education backgrounds vary widely even if they attended local high schools
      • Links, tags, and folders have different uses
      • Literacy is white property and grading is used to exclude non-white bodies from its use
      • Literature note filenames are BibTex keys
      • Living in the United States is the first time many international students have used English outside of a foreign language classroom
      • Low-income students are less successful in college than other students
      • Lulu Merle Johnson
      • Mainstream discourse on disability is deficit-based.
      • Make data geometries semi-transparent to lessen the overplotting problem
      • Mandel's was an early iteration of labor-based grading contracts that emphasized having faith in students willingness to improve in an encouraging setting
      • Many charities fail due to a deep ableist perspective of care.
      • Many DEI initiatives in higher education fail to be inclusive when it comes to academic policies and grading, reducing those initiatives merely to diversity theatre
      • Many diversity lottery recipients experience challenges finding relevant jobs.
      • Many diversity lottery recipients have high levels of debt
      • Many diversity lottery recipients plan to return to their home country.
      • Many non-white disabled people are excluded from disabled communities due to racism.
      • Many people do not feel comfortable identifying as disabled.
      • Many rhetorical prohibitions in the standard academic English curriculum are effective rhetorical tools
      • Many students have their own beliefs about language purity and may be resistant to invitations to use multiple languages in an activity
      • Many students with diverse cultural backgrounds have strongly held cultural attitudes towards education and learning that may be difficult to change
      • Many support programs actually only serve to promote the problem.
      • Maps of content
      • Marcus Garvey
      • Marginalized people are rarely seen as experts.
      • Marginalized students often have more responsibilities to their families and communities than others.
      • Marginalized students often have vague goals or unclear strategies for meeting their career and education goals.
      • Mary McLeod Bethune
      • McGarrell promotes a classroom ecology that avoids instructor evaluation in the form of grades, but does not preclude extensive feedback
      • McTigue identified three aspects of any spiritual practice; intention, attention, and repetition
      • Measures of diversity, equity, and inclusion in post-secondary institutions
      • Mentors are documented as vital support for immigrant students as they move through higher education
      • Method for documenting sortable academic sessions
      • Microaggressions are hostilities related to another person's minority status.
      • Microaggressions are often unintended, but the impact of them is what is important to consider.
      • Misogynoir is the intersectional oppression of Black women.
      • Mistakes can be opportunities.
      • Models help us understand things.
      • More parts of the brain are activated when using information in productive language and sensemaking.
      • Most college students drop out in their first year
      • Motion is a preattentive attribute used to communicate quantitative information
      • Motion is an attribute that can be interpreted differently depending on the culture
      • Multicultural and plurilingual experiences can be used to teach students about critical analysis and logical fallacies
      • Multilingual students are often tested with academic language before they are ready
      • Multilingual students often act as translators and peer mentors for students with less proficiency in English
      • My emotions often express themselves through my body
      • Narrative structure commonly has three parts, or acts
      • Native language forms a part of one's overall identity.
      • Nearly half of American college students report committing at least minor acts of plagiarism
      • New university students, not just international students, lack awareness of how plagiarism is defined
      • Nguzo Saba
      • Nikole Hannah-Jones
      • Non-linguistic interference to education is not addressed in federal policies.
      • Non-native English speakers in higher education are not a homogeneous group.
      • Non-native English speaking students are more likely to violate academic integrity policies
      • Non-treatable errors are called this because they are difficult to explain and require tacit knowlege of the language
      • Not all ESL students are the same; we cannot conflate first-generation immigrant and refugee students with second- or third- generation students or international students without proper research
      • Not all linguistic minority students are the same.
      • Note-taking in class correlates with higher grades
      • Note-taking strategy
      • Novice learners prefer less complicated tasks.
      • Of all of the linguistic skills, writing has the biggest impact on students' acceptance into mainstream college courses
      • On the history of ethnic conflict in the United States
      • One can be proficient in a language for some situations but not others
      • One needs to be more thoughtful about what notes we take when there is more friction to storing it in our system
      • One of my initial mistakes in Obsidian was creating pages for sources that I have not read but want to read
      • One of the reasons citations and attribution are valued in higher education is that scientific progress depends on it
      • One strategy to design clean visuals is to take everything away and only add back what is necessary
      • One technique is to give each group a random topic on a piece of paper; each group has a different one which gives them something useful to share out with the rest of the class
      • One-on-one meetings with students can help build an atmosphere of trust and transparency
      • One's linguistic repertoire includes all languages that they have acquired, regardless of the level of proficiency
      • Oral traditions are a core part of African culture.
      • Organization
      • Organizations of Interest
      • Organizations should have clear policies to describe what employees cannot post on social media.
      • Organizing by actionability is incredibly useful
      • Ortmeier and Ruecker call on writing researchers to be prepared to respond to discussions that involve linguistic minority students
      • Our main job as a teacher is to be a curator
      • Our surroundings play a powerful role in our thinking; known as the Cathedral Effect
      • Overplotting is a situation where there are too much data represented which causes elements to overlap and become unreadable
      • Part of group discussion assessment can be done by students themselves
      • Peer behavior was found to be a major predictor of student cheating
      • Peer review activity requires careful training in order to be useful to students
      • Peers do not factor highly in the career aspirations of adolescents
      • People acquire language better when their affective filters are not interfering.
      • People experience grief when diagnosed with a chronic illness.
      • People in rural areas and small towns are more likely to believe that immigrants increase crime rates and take jobs from locals
      • People often spend more time on trivial decisions to avoid overwhelming ones.
      • People tend to respond with self-preservation when they feel isolated
      • People who have had formal education in their first language learn a second language faster than those without.
      • People who have the most access to privilege benefit the most from monolingual ideologies
      • People who need community the most are often uncharismatic.
      • Performative readings of short texts can be a low-anxiety warm-up for oral language classes
      • Personal knowledge management has a long history
      • Personality models are centered on whiteness.
      • Pie charts are useless
      • Pierre Bourdieu
      • Placing importance on time management is a product of white habits of mind
      • Plan of possibilities helps us avoid the mentality of simply covering content and allow us to design in a student-centered way
      • Plan to age and it will not catch you by surprise.
      • Plot data that is summarized by useful metrics to avoid the overplotting problem
      • Plurilingual pedagogy goes beyond following writing rules and focuses on acts of communication that involves a student's entire linguistic repertoire
      • Plurilingualism accepts that everyone uses a variety of language or dialectal resources for different purposes
      • Plurilingualism also presupposes an openness to cultural diversity
      • Plurilingualism is a strategy where speakers of multiple languages use those languages to communicate and learn
      • Plurilingualism research challenges the insistence on an academic standard English
      • Plurilinguals have tremendous flexibility in their language usage which allows them to mediate effectively across diverse audiences
      • Pod mapping is a technique to map out your personal mutual aid network.
      • Poor language proficiency is a factor in plagiarism due to the inability to internalize information
      • Population of linguistic minority students in K-12 is also growing fast in Canada
      • Position is a preattentive attribute used with both quantitative and qualitative information
      • Position is an attribute that can be interpreted differently depending on the culture.
      • Potatoes are the real Gold of El Dorado.
      • Preattentive attributes are an easily noticeable difference in appearance useful for both quantitative and qualitative data
      • Presentations are not the only way to assess verbal communication learning objectives; discussions can also do this
      • Presenting cultural artifacts supports students in discussing abstract concepts.
      • Previous language and cultural experience shapes how new languages and cultures are learned
      • Prior educational experiences vary even more widely for linguistic minority students that moved to the United States as adults
      • Prison Commisary Prices
      • Probability Theory
      • Problematization is a process of critically analyzing a concept so as to get past conventional meaning and create a deeper understanding of its true nature
      • Professional culture centers whiteness.
      • Proficiency in multiple languages can be shown as an additional designation on students' diplomas
      • Projects should require student knowledge to promote agency.
      • Proper referencing and citation is a complex language skill that is often not thoughtfully introduced in the classroom
      • Provide evidence of the quality of your work in a resume
      • Providing skeletal notes is one method of helping students take notes in class
      • Public and nonprofit work became popular in the Black community after Executive Order 8802.
      • Publishing often has many benefits.
      • Punctuality is another white habit of mind often imposed on students (of color) in ESL classrooms
      • Putting students into small discussion groups can help avoid the consolidation of responsibility and increase student to student interaction
      • Putting value on students' linguistic expertise in their own language can be useful in teaching them how to do similar things in English
      • Race is a social construct.
      • Racial gaslighting is the act of attempting to convince a victim of microaggressions that the behavior was not racially motivated.
      • Racism is a social system that divides people.
      • Racism limits social progress.
      • Rational emotive therapy is practice of using logical thinking to combat negative self-talk.
      • Reading List
      • Reading silently was not a common skill until the 5th century
      • Reading the first and last words of a sentence can give you the general sense of the text
      • Reading was a communal activity and recitation of common ideas was the norm
      • Recency bias is the preference for ideas that we thought of more recently
      • Reflective journaling exercises have a number of benefits for learning.
      • Refugee and Immigrant Association
      • Refugees are involuntary migrants that are persecuted for social and political reasons.
      • Regardless of policy on segregation, it continues to cause harm.
      • Religion is institutionalized spirituality, and not spirituality itself
      • Representation is important.
      • Requiring students to edit their own work before beginning peer review activities reduces the workload of peer reviewers
      • Research is prone to racial biases.
      • Research on developmental sequences of grammar
      • Researchers argue that a centralized ESOL program is more effective than several uncoordinated programs
      • Researchers argue that the labor of identity building should be rewarded in terms of academic credit
      • Researchers have found that students often compose across modalities without realizing it
      • Resilient communities have tolerance for mistakes and repair.
      • Resources for New Iowans in Johnson County
      • Roberts' Rules of Order
      • Rubrics reduce students' uncertainty in grading
      • Rural teachers are more likely to believe that ELL students should be responsible for adapting to American culture and lifestyles
      • Sankey plots are a good way to visualize outcomes disaggregated by multiple factors
      • Sarah Breedlove
      • Saturation, chroma, or the intensity of color is a preattentive attribute used with quantitative information
      • Scaffolding is a technique where we break down a complex skill into smaller parts to help students reach the more complex goal
      • School assessments tend to be designed to measure learning of the dominant majority
      • Schools reproduce the culture of the dominant class
      • Schools with recent demographic shifts often lack the diversity in faculty to support multilingual students
      • Second Language Acquisition
      • Self-assessments can also ask students to nominate another student who did good work
      • Self-assessments can ask students for specific examples of their evaluation
      • Set Theory
      • Sets are identified only by their members
      • Several features of academic culture in the US are believed to come from a dominant WASP culture
      • Several studies have concluded that grammar correction does not lead to grammar acquisition
      • Shape is a preattentive attribute used with qualitative information
      • Sharing your resources with the organization as a whole and not just your supervisor is a step towards distributed leadership
      • Shor argues that there is no real contract if it is entirely unilateral
      • Significant social change is achieved through consistent activism.
      • Small liberal arts colleges tend to hire support specialists rather than have specific courses for ESL students
      • Social and economic capital can provide advantages to students in higher education.
      • Social network theory supposes that the foundation of social life is the relationships between people and the patterns thereof
      • Social rejection is the opposite of social support.
      • Social support is a powerful tool for coping with stress.
      • Social support research considers the ways relationships with others affects us for better or worse.
      • Social support should not be used in lieu of efforts to reduce environmental stress.
      • Social work began as a response to challenges brought on by industrialization and globalization.
      • Social work has the potential to be used to spy on and control unrest in minoritized communities.
      • Socioacademic Relationships
      • Sojourner Truth
      • Some activities in the language learning classroom produce more anxiety than others
      • Some cultures take the view that quoting an author implies doubt or disrespect
      • Some foreign accents are often equated with low intelligence.
      • Some instructors require consistent participation and preparation to earn an A in the class
      • Some properties can be interpreted differently for different cultures
      • Some students may resist contract grading due to its unfamiliarity
      • Some studies suggest that the benefits of living in ethnic enclaves offset the disadvantages of associated low socio-economic status
      • Spiritual practices strengthen our connection to our higher self
      • Splitting data visualizations into separate plots along a categorical variable is called faceting
      • Standards in grading can change over the course of grading assignments, and students who were graded first can have a more or less strict standard than students graded towards the end
      • Stanford University School of Education
      • Start with easier group discussion questions and increase the difficulty
      • Statement of Purpose
      • Statistics
      • Stereotype threat is an internalized bias where the person believes a stereotype about their identity to be true
      • Stereotype threat reduces the efficacy of students because they believe the stereotype to be true even when it is not
      • Student evaluations are poor measures of teaching effectiveness.
      • Student success depends on a sense of belonging.
      • Student-to-student Interaction in Second Language Classrooms
      • Students can be distracted by too many error corrections.
      • Students can be unable to use error corrections for features which they are not ready to acquire.
      • Students can benefit from taking the time to map out their socioacademic support networks and being coached on how to ask those resources for help.
      • Students can earn points for participation and preparation to encourage engagement in group discussions
      • Students can explain their language choices more easily when allowed to do so in their preferred language
      • Students can pursue language learning projects related to their personal and professional needs
      • Students come to the classroom with a range of communicative and technological abilities and educational experiences
      • Students may have different goals and it's important to consider those goals when deciding how they will be evaluated
      • Students often do not value inclusivity in assignments because the labor involved is not rewarded
      • Students should explore the diversity of dialects around them
      • Students who are permitted to use their other languages are able to write longer and higher quality papers in English.
      • Students who do not have access to a white racial habitus will not easily understand its rules
      • Students who have or are adjacent to privilege may not notice the struggle of adopting a white language habitus that other students do
      • Students who report having English as a second language can still be more fluent in English than any other language
      • Students who were not raised in white habitus households struggle to adopt habits of white language in college
      • Students with diverse cultural backgrounds often do not feel that copying or cheating is a problem
      • Studies in the error correction debate
      • Studies show some students benefit from contract grading in terms of motivation and learning, but results were mixed
      • Studies show that English language learners place a low value on peer feedback
      • Success in conventional classrooms is synonymous with adopting a white racial habitus
      • Survey students about their technology usage and consider developing lessons and support around that knowledge
      • Tables can be easily formatted as heat maps to use color saturation to guide the eye
      • Teach students the signposting vocabulary we use to introduce important information
      • Teach students to use blanks in their notes when they do not understand something
      • Teacher-centered activities have more disadvantages than benefits.
      • Teachers can connect language and identity work in the classroom to future benefits through job applications, scholarships, and other opportunities
      • Teachers can do a lot of damage if implicit biases are unchecked.
      • Teachers have an effect on student anxiety.
      • Teachers should break down technological terms so that all students can understand them
      • Teaching
      • Techniques such as anonymous grading, grading contracts, clarifications, and an asset-based mindset can help reduce bias
      • Temple University
      • Terms such as English language learners (ELLs) and limited English proficient (LEP) are commonly used in K-12 education but focus primarily on the deficits of students
      • The acquisition of an additional language challenges our sense of self.
      • The additional cost of debt and family support among African Americans is known as the Black tax.
      • The anxiety surrounding immigration issues can put unusual pressures on immigrant students.
      • The brain uses one fifth of the body's energy, and most of that just to power thinking
      • The burden of proof is on the one making the claim rather than the skeptic
      • The concept of affective and cognitive variables is messy and ill-defined.
      • The concept of always-already, or immer schon refers to an action or state that has continued without any known beginning
      • The concept of writing across the curriculum has been a topic since at least the 1970s
      • The Conference on College Composition and Communication opposes standard academic English as the norm in higher education
      • The consolidation of responsibility is the phenomenon where a small number of students make up the majority of class discussion
      • The curb-cut effect is the way that changes made to benefit marginalized people also benefits everyone else.
      • The Dead Prefer Silver
      • The Diversity Visa Lottery program drains vulnerable countries of quality human resources.
      • The dominant narrative of multilingual students is deficit-based.
      • The emotions we favor are determined by what we believe are most functional in our context
      • The evolution of design in library architecture is a reflection of our relationship with reading
      • The experience of reading is similar to our experience of space
      • The FBI surveils people it considers to be dangerous to established power.
      • The fewer grading categories or measurement points tends to be make for a more reliable measurement which increases inter-rater reliability
      • The first step to managing implicit biases is to reflect on them and to get feedback from other people
      • The gestalt principle of connection describes how elements that are connected to another element communicates a relationship to that element
      • The gestalt principle of enclosure describes how elements that are enclosed in a box or designated area communicate a relationship
      • The gestalt principle of proximity describes how elements that are physically close together communicates a relationship
      • The gestalt principle of similarity describes how elements that have the same color or shape communicate a relationship
      • The gestalt principles of visual perception are basic design principles that describe how audiences read visual information like charts
      • The global area of writing is related to the higher-order features of content and organization
      • The habit of white-centering can be framed as an addiction.
      • The habits developed in the first class session sets the tone for the rest of the semester
      • The home ought to be a workshop that uses the family's labor power to produce goods for a market
      • The idea of writing across the curriculum spread the responsibility of writing instruction across all departments, instead of just the English department
      • The increasing numbers of immigrants is not limited to major metropolitan areas, but is also increasing in smaller towns and rural areas as well
      • The issue of licensure has been a serious conflict in social work organizations.
      • The literacy ecology framework supposes that literacy is acquired when people use language to handle problems in their daily lives
      • The local area of writing feedback is related to sentence-level grammar, spelling, and mechanics
      • The London Underground Tube map is a good example of many design principles
      • The majority of the population has some sort of disability.
      • The mean of combined samples can obscure significant variations within the data.
      • The more visual detail presented on the screen, the more likely your audience will experience cognitive overload and tune out
      • The pace for cultural integration is individual
      • The PARA system divides notes into four categories based on actionability.
      • The pooling of data points around specific numbers might suggest data integrity issues
      • The population of linguistic minority students is growing quickly
      • The relational model of competence assumes that judgements of competence are subjective.
      • The Second Brain system combines several personal knowledge management techniques along with those developed by its creator, Tiago Forte
      • The specific goals of cultural integration are individual
      • The Tacoma Method was an episode of anti-Chinese ethnic cleansing that occured in Tacoma, Washington in 1885
      • The term bilingual or multilingual became common as a way to center the assets that linguistic minority students bring to the classroom
      • The term linguistic minority is used in higher education and applied linguistic contexts to describe students who speak a language other than English at home in English-dominant societies
      • The term third-world is rooted in a white perspective of geography.
      • The United States has a legacy of disenfranchisement of non-white residents.
      • The US Federal government reserves the exclusive right to manage immigration.
      • The use of a "free space" can be used to allow students to avoid being called on during hard days.
      • The white savior complex is a belief that white people are responsible for saving other races.
      • There are costs for students in volunteering multilingual information or labor
      • There are differences in cultural attitudes towards intellectual property and authorship
      • There are five categories of student support people
      • There are flaws in the US racial classification system that limits its accuracy.
      • There are four areas of competency when it comes to group discussions; understanding the content, articulating ideas, synthesizing content, and connecting the content to other content or their lives
      • There are many names for traditions of mindful reading across cultures
      • There are often conflicts between assimilationist and activist members of a marginalized community.
      • There are several reasons to strive for diversity, equity, and inclusion in organizations.
      • There are some concerns that students who are habitually motivated by grades do not do well in labor-based grading systems including hybrid grading contracts
      • There are three steps in working with student writing; noticing, awareness of options, and action
      • There are three types of interaction in the classroom between resources, learners, and the instructor
      • There are tools being developed to detect AI-generated text
      • There are two categories of plagiarism; intentional and unintentional
      • There can be a strong cultural preference for students engaging in counter-productive collaborative work
      • There is a racial educational achievement gap in the United States.
      • There is a tendency to acknowledge a limited number of voices from a minoritized community.
      • There is a trend for immigrants to move to smaller cities with more affordable housing and tax policies
      • There is a writing activity that asks students to explain and reflect on a meaningful word or phrase in their first language
      • There is some evidence that labor-based grading systems help vulnerable students learn better
      • There is some research to support that groups of learners can acquire language in different sequences
      • There should be different approaches to placing ESOL students because different groups of students will acquire language differently; it's not one-size-fits-all language support
      • Think-pair-share activities give students an opportunity to hear more diverse perspectives than just the instructor
      • Time spent planning class discussion questions improves the quality of in-class discussions
      • Todd Ruecker
      • Tone policing is the act of trying to change the emotionality of a person's message.
      • Trans rights and affordable housing are connected issues.
      • Translingual pedagogy focuses on resistance to linguistic standardization in academia
      • Translingualism and plurilingualism are two similar but distinct pedagogies.
      • Translingualism approaches language as something flexible and primarily as a tool for constructing meaning using a variety of linguistic resources
      • Transparency is a teaching intervention that educates students on how learning happens
      • Treatable errors are rule-governed and thus easier to explain
      • Triage levels
      • Truscott claims that error correction has a negative effect on students' attitudes
      • Twelve Favorite Problems
      • Types of plagiarism include mosaic plagiarism, patch writing, and mechanical plagiarism
      • UC Davis, School of Education
      • UIMSW Statement of Purpose
      • Understanding how bureaucratic systems work is a valuable skill.
      • Unfair placement testing for language-minority college students
      • University of Toronto Ontario Institute for Studies in Education
      • Use a phone's speech to text features on Obsidian Mobile to capture stream of consciousness thoughts
      • Use a variety of teaching techniques to accommodate diverse cultural backgrounds
      • Use Obsidian and Dataview to track the status of multiple articles
      • Use Obsidian to explore memories and personal narrative
      • Use tags instead of backlinks to organize notes into task lists
      • Using longer-term projects rather than individual activities in a class has a number of benefits
      • Visual displays of organization are superior to both folders and tags
      • W.E.B. DuBois
      • Watching videos with subtitles can have a number of useful benefits.
      • Watson uses community building activities to begin to remove deficit-thinking and implicit bias within the classroom
      • We can decenter whiteness by centering the most vulnerable populations.
      • We need a coalition of intellectuals and laborers united against oppression.
      • We pay for information with attention
      • What; So what; Now what; is a summary and review technique used at the end of lectures
      • When giving feedback, thank students for specific contributions, and ask for more effort in specific areas
      • When students are silent, waiting five seconds is a good rule of thumb; often quieter students will speak up
      • When teaching keyboarding skills, use inclusive images and reference to other keyboard layouts besides English
      • Whether a student can articulate a grammar rule is independent of whether they can identify an error
      • White and Asian students are twice as likely to graduate than other racial and ethnic groups
      • White supremacy and white-centering are similar but distinct concepts.
      • White-adjacent refers to a non-white person who aligns themselves with whiteness.
      • Whiteness absorbs and destroys culture
      • Whiteness is a code that is associated with cleanliness, neatness, and purity
      • Whiteness is a ponzi scheme.
      • Whiteness is property.
      • Whiteness was created to divide the working class.
      • Women and non-binary folks are disproportionately expected to take on emotional labor.
      • Workers in a capitalist system lose at both ends of the market equation
      • Working on many problems at once distributes the power of an organization.
      • Working-class students have a better experience in learning when it is framed as work or labor
      • Writing assessment does not use real examples as a reference, but uses what Inoue calls exemplar-inspired dimensions
      • Writing down notes while lecturing helps slow your pace to match what students can keep up with
      • Writing improves thinking.
      • Writing, like all arts, must first be learned from imitating appropriate models
      • Yasuko Kanno
      • Your resume does not necessarily need to be technical because a recruiter might not be familiar with the jargon
      • Your resume should show exposure to different types of projects and the diversity of your interests
      • Your resume should tell a focused story
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    Tag: moc

    Tag: moc

    2 items with this tag.

    • Sep 29, 2025

      Linguistic minority students and academic dishonesty

      • moc
    • Sep 29, 2025

      Linguistic minority students in higher education

      • moc

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