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Center for Faculty Development

Teaching Innovation Mini-Grants

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The Center for Faculty Development awards four $300 mini-grants each fall and spring to USM teaching faculty to support innovation in the classroom. Applicants are asked to describe how specific teaching strategies or experiences will motivate and ignite student engagement to improve learning outcomes in the classroom. The funds may be used for materials or services that support strategies including modalities to guide a course lesson plan, to assess student learning, to develop class materials, to support a guest speaker, etc. We encourage faculty to think outside the box and consider cutting edge pedagogical ideas for the classroom along with sustainability of said idea.

Preference will be given to faculty members who have actively utilized opportunities for faculty development from the Center for Faculty Development programs (e.g., Teaching Forums and Workshops, ACUE Faculty Development Institute, Scholarship of Teaching and Learning Fellow, etc.) or engaged in other efforts to enhance their instructional skills (e.g. Service Learning Designation, unit level workshops).

Grant recipients will guide a Teaching Forum in the CFD the following semester of their award on the implementation of the described classroom strategy or experience.

APPLICATION REQUIREMENTS:

  • Course number(s) and title(s)
  • Anticipated number of students impacted
  • Brief statement of participation in the Center for Faculty Development or other efforts to enhance instructional skills.
  • Description of strategy of experience to be supported by Teaching Innovation Mini-Grant, a timeline for implementation, and an itemized cost estimate.
  • Description of anticipated impact in the classroom, how the impact will be assessed, and how the project will be sustained.
  • Agreement to collaborate with the CFD to disseminate information (e.g., a panel, workshop, or video) to share your strategy with others.
     

APPLICATION PROCESS:

Applications for Spring 2025 mini-grants will be accepted until November 15, 2024. Awards will be announced and recipients notified on or before December 2, 2024. Please note, faculty who received a mini-grant within the last academic year are not eligible to apply.

 

Mini Grant Awards

Allison Downing Proposal: To build a K12 Science Instructional Resources Database (K12 SIRD) for undergraduate teacher candidates. Center for STEM Education
Jeffrey Parr Proposal: To purchase and utilize a virtual reality headset to enhance the educational experience of athletic training students in the classroom. School of Health Professions
Candice Salyers Proposal: To support guest artist Bradford Chin鈥檚 disability justice dance workshops and performance creation. School of Performing and Visual Arts (Dance)

 

Marissa Alawine Proposal: To purchase durable materials and prizes for the psychology escape room. School of Psychology
Amy LeBert Proposal: To help support the purchasing a software program titled Systematic Analysis of Language Transcripts (SALT). School of Speech and Hearing Sciences
Mohsen Foroughi Sabzevar Proposal: To acquire the Meta Quest 3 virtual reality headset. School of Construction and Design
Wei Wang Proposal: To purchase technology equipment for my class.  School of Marketing
Zhaoxian Zhou Proposal: To fund three sets of Robot Car Kits for a hands-on project in the CE101 course, enhancing student engagement and retention through team-based competition and informal instruction. Computing Sciences and Computer Engineering

 

Matthew Donahue Proposal: To purchase three Snatoms model kits from Amazon. Mathematics and Natural Sciences
Chao Meng Proposal: To fund a simulation game using Lego blocks for teaching lean manufacturing concepts. School of Marketing
James Thomas Proposal:  To purchase access to various newspaper databases that are currently unavailable to me through USM. School of Education
Sunny Wells Proposal: To support an in-person orientation for students beginning their mandatory field experiences in the fully online Secondary MAT (Alternative licensure) program. School of Education

 

Clinton Martin Proposal: To bring experts from the construction industry to the online classroom, and to buy Bluetooth headsets for faculty collaborators and outside experts to use to record micro-lectures that will augment topics taught in 6 courses. School of Construction and Design
Christopher Smith Proposal: To support the participation of graduate students in the College of Business and Economic Development who are interested in real estate development in intercollegiate real estate case competitions.  School of Finance

 

Alyson Brink Proposal: To fund hands-on candy activities for teaching geology concepts in GLY 103. College of Arts & Sciences
Molly Edwards  Proposal: To properly compensate guest speakers in the NFS 640 Advanced Medical Nutrition Therapy (MNT) class.  School of Kinesiology and Nutrition
Allison Formanack Proposal: To invite a local historian to share Mississippi folklore with students and to print 20 perfect-bound copies of the student's collected stories for purchase. College of Arts & Sciences
Shana Oates Proposal: To bring one of the leading assessment practitioners in Student Affairs to speak during my fall Assessment class.  Educational Research and Administration
Rebecca Tuuri Proposal: To fund a field trip for students to enhance their understanding of African American history. School of Humanities

 

Melissa Kossman Proposal: To purchase a fully-functioning anatomical skeleton that can be referenced in combination with course content, a vital aspect to the success of our students in the Athletic Training and Kinesiotherapy programs. School of Health Professions
Masha Krsmanovic Proposal: To fund expert-led workshops for EdD students on dissertation skills and development. School of Education
Alexandra Valint Proposal: To purchase an escape room game, as well as copies of the classic detective board game Clue.  School of Humanities
Shane Wood  Proposal: To purchase microphones and recorders to help with a student podcast project which focuses on embodied listening through multimodalities in digital technologies and explores the genre conventions of podcasting. School of Humanities

 

Kenneth Christensen Proposal: To develop more active learning content for the in-person Academic Support I course. School of Interdisciplinary Studies and Professional Development
Marie Danforth Proposal: To support 3D-printed bone models for forensic anthropology education. School of Social Science and Global Studies
Joann Judge Proposal: To initiate a preliminary program for students enrolled in Adapted Physical Education, Sport, & Activity with the opportunity to engage, interact, or teach individuals with disabilities in physical education, sport, or activity in a practicum setting. School of Kinesiology & Nutrition
Jason Wallace Proposal: To support scholar-led virtual caucus facilitations and a guest lecture. School of Education

 

Emily Bes Proposal: To purchase the educator package VISME for the Spring semester to help with my presentation development.  School of Health Professions
Amy LeBert Proposal: To bring in a behavior specialist to provide an intensive short course focused on providing strategies for students to use during treatment sessions with patients that exhibit mild to severe behavior issues.  School of Speech and Hearing Sciences
Katherine Moore Proposal: To support COVID-adapted methods of teaching Contact Improvisation in my Dance Improvisation course next spring.  School of Performing and Visual Arts
Candice Salyers Proposal:  To develop interdisciplinary conversations through a lecture and performance series. School of Performing and Visual Art (Dance)

 

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Center for Faculty Development
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Hattiesburg, MS 39406

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Phone
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