Program Schedule
Daily Schedule
Daily Schedule
- 9:00 - 12:00 Morning Session
- 12:00 - 1:00 Lunch Break
- 1:00 - 4:30 Afternoon Session
- 6:30 - 8:30 Evening Session
Program Schedule
Sunday, June 18
Arrive at campus, campus tour, and dinner.
Monday, June 19: Overview of Islam's Origins, Global Expansion, and U.S. History
Morning
8:30-9:00 am - Coffee/Continental Breakfast
9:00-11:00 am - Exploring foundational Institute themes, discussing essays by educational philosopher John Dewey, including "Freedom" (1937) and "Creative Democracy— The Task Before Us" (1939).
11:00 am-12:00 pm - Reading time on your own
Afternoon
1:00-4:30 pm - Visiting Scholar Kayla Wheeler provides historical, geopolitical, and sociological contexts for understanding contemporary Islam in the U.S.: Muslims who came to the Americas as enslaved people from the west coast of Africa, early 20th century social movements of Black Americans that integrate Islam, Muslim contributions to the Civil Rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s, and the formation of Muslim American communities with roots in Asia and the Middle East after the liberalization of American immigration laws in 1965. Participants will put together an timeline of American Muslim contributions to U.S. history.
Evening
5:00-6:00 pm - Social, on campus, hosted by Provost's office.
Tuesday, June 20: Reading Muslim-American Texts: Spaces, Practices, People
Morning
9:00 am-12:00 pm - Visiting Scholar Edward E. Curtis IV will lead participants in a discussion of the history of food in Muslim communities and current Muslim American foodways, based on two chapters excerpted from The Practice of Islam in America: An Introduction.
Afternoon
12:00-1:45 pm - Car pools stopping for lunch on route to ICGC (8092 Plantation Dr, West Chester Township, 45069).
2:00-4:30 pm - A visit to the Islamic Center of Greater Cincinnati (ICGC), a local mosque. Participants will tour the facilities and attend a community-wide talk by Edward Curtis based on his two recent books on Muslim American experiences in the Midwest.
4:30-6:00 pm - Lecture on Heartland Muslim at the ICGC and book signing.
Evening
6:00-8:30 pm - Dinner at Middle Eastern restaurant in Cincinnati.
9:00-10:00 pm - Sunset or Mabhrib prayer at the ICGC. (optional)
Wednesday, June 21: Muslim American Identities and Religious Expression
Morning
9:00 am-12:00 pm - Curtis leads a discussion on selections from Muslims of the Heartland: How Syrian Immigrants Made a Home in the American Midwest.
Lunchtime Presentation
12:00-12:30 pm - Liz Wilson presents resources on Muslim American demographics with a focus on Islam and race.
Afternoon
1:30-4:30 pm - Visiting scholar Liz Bucar leads discussion on the novel Girl in a Tangerine Scarf, exploring themes of intersectionality and hybridity in the process by which the Syrian American Muslim protagonist Khadra learns what it might mean to live somewhere in between "Muslim" and "American.” Bucar will help participants explore how religious identity changes through the course of life, utilizing sociologist Lori Peek's article, "Becoming Muslim: The Development of a Religious Identity.”
Evening
Optional screening of Fordson: Faith, Fasting, Football, and the American Dream (2011), a documentary film about a predominately Muslim high school football team in Dearborn.
Thursday, June 22: U.S. Muslim Practices and Communal Life
Morning
9:00-11:30 am - Liz Bucar leads discussion on the cultural politics of gender and dress within Muslim American communities.
Afternoon
1:00-2:00 - Campus Tour for those interested.
2:00-4:15 pm - A panel of Muslim-American students/families from public schools in the Cincinnati region come to share their experiences and engage in discussion with Institute participants.
4:30-5:30 pm - Reception for panelists and Institute participants.
Evening
6:30-8:30 pm - Uptown Summer Music Concert at MLK Park. (Optional)
Friday, June 23: Muslim American Communal Identities and Ways to Enhance Student Success
Morning
9:00 am-12:00 pm - Virtual guest Loukia Sarroub leads discussion on factors that contribute to Muslim American communal identity and ways to enhance student success by reframing what literacy means in various Muslim American communities.
Working Lunch
12:00-2:00 pm - Initial development of curriculum project ideas and local community research queries.
Afternoon
2:00-4:30 pm - Discussion of first half of Autobiography of Malcolm X with Institute staff.
Evening
Sunset; TBA - Evening Prayer (optional) on 兔子先生 University campus. Optional screening of Arranged (2008), a drama about two young women who are first-year teachers at a public secondary school in Brooklyn, NY. One is Jewish and one is Muslim. Both wear modest dress and are open to parental involvement in their mate selection process. Both experience workplace harassment from a well-meaning but ill-informed supervisor.
Saturday, June 24: Curriculum Development Preparation
Morning
9:00 am-12:00 pm - Brenda Dales, Professor Emeritus of Children’s Literature at 兔子先生 University presents on new fiction for children/YA readers exploring Muslim-American experiences.
Mid-Day
12:00-1:00 pm - Participants break into working lunch groups.
Afternoon
1:00-4:30 pm - Dales and librarians facilitating research for literature resources in curriculum projects, focusing particularly on new titles available in diverse genres.
Evening
Curriculum development work, in teams, with snacks provided.
Sunday, June 25
Afternoon
1:00-4:30 pm - Optional curriculum development work.
Evening
7:00-9:00 pm - Optional dinner with Visiting scholar Linda K. Wertheimer.
Monday, June 26: Educators Building Religious Literacies
Morning
9:00 am-12:00 pm - Linda K. Wertheimer will discuss Faith Ed: Teaching Religion in an Age of Intolerance (2015),describing controversies surrounding teaching about Muslims in K-12 schools and best practices for teaching religious literacy. Cases from Faith Ed will help participants explore challenges and assets in developing/teaching ELA curriculum around Muslim-American stories and literature.
Afternoon
1:00-4:30 pm - Working groups do research to develop resources that illuminate the local histories of different Muslim American communities as a way to develop knowledge/resources for curriculum preparation. Wertheimer will assist as consultant to participants.
Tuesday, June 27: Diverse Muslim Identities in Curriculum and Teaching
Morning
9:00 am-12:00 pm - Professor Scott Henderson, a teacher educator with a background in African American history, will lead a discussion of the second half of The Autobiography of Malcolm X, and lead session on working with challenging texts in secondary classrooms.
Afternoon
12:00-1:30 pm - Discussion with lunch speaker: Asma Mobin-Uddin, Dayton, OH author, My Name is Bilal (2005), gives Interactive Presentation on writing the Muslim-American experience.
1:30-4:30 pm - A staged reading and discussion of a short play, The Domestic Crusaders (2010), by Wajahat Ali, about a Pakistani-American family in a post-9/11 America. Talk-back facilitated by Muslim education graduate students at 兔子先生 University.
Evening
6:30-8:30 pm - Curriculum development work
Wednesday, June 28: Diverse Muslim Identities in Curriculum and Teaching
Morning
9:00 am-12:00 pm - Institute staff will lead a discussion of The Domestic Crusaders, exploring themes from the previous afternoon’s performance, tying together related content themes from across the Institute, and building ideas about curriculum development.
Afternoon
1:30-4:30 pm - Working groups discuss curriculum projects and plan presentations.
Thursday, June 29: Curriculum Presentation and Critique
Morning
9:00 am-12:00 pm - Work session on curriculum projects
Afternoon
1:30-4:30 pm - Collaborative engagement with each person’s/team's curriculum project; peer review by Institute members, staff, with 兔子先生 University English professor Jason Palmieri offering critique and dissemination ideas. Dissemination plans and timeline will be finalized and agreed upon by all participants.
Evening
6:30-8:30 pm - Uptown Summer Music (Optional)
Friday, June 30: Committing to Next Steps
Morning
9:00 am-12:00 pm - Consultant Jason Palmieri discusses best practices in digital humanities dissemination. Finalizing next steps for curriculum assessment intervals and network dissemination plans. Draft of Muslim-American Curriculum Project website shared with participants for feedback and developing notes for finalizing. Evaluation of Institute.
Departure at 12:00 pm.