Toronto Metropolitan University
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Creating community in online critical social work courses

journal contribution
posted on 2024-08-08, 17:50 authored by Rose C.B Singh, Renée Nichole FergusonRenée Nichole Ferguson

This piece shares a practical participation assignment that emphasizes community-building, activism, collective learning, and contributions. Grounded in critical and inclusive pedagogical approaches, this assignment strives to create and model critical social work practices that require learners to be thoughtful and intentional about their engagement with the community both within and beyond the borders of the virtual classroom. We included this participation assignment in asynchronous online critical social work courses and continue to develop the assignment based on student experiences and feedback. We share the strengths of the assignment, for example, community-building, mutual peer support, countering the isolation that is commonly experienced in online learning, critical self-reflection and self-evaluation, opportunities for student choice, and encouragement of social justice activism outside of the course, and bringing this back into the course in meaningful ways. We also indicate contradictions and challenges of the assignment, for instance, individualistic expectations of participation, resistance from learners to non-traditional assignments, unsettling dominance in curriculum, and the corresponding implications on student evaluations. Lastly, we share our hopeful roadmap for support and implementation of critical and inclusive pedagogical approaches for online social work education and creative assignments that build community inside and outside our learning and teaching contexts.

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