A two-and-a-half-year faculty and curriculum development project on Latino/a history for thirty-six community college faculty and academic administrators in New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, and eastern Pennsylvania.

Postmark Deadline: April 30, 2013
A two-and-a-half-year faculty and curriculum development project on Latino/a history for thirty-six community college faculty and academic administrators in New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, and eastern Pennsylvania.
Pennee Bender, pbender@gc.cuny.edu [2]
Today, more than half of post-secondary students in the U.S. attend community colleges. Yet the essential role of humanities instruction at these institutions is sometimes overlooked – despite the fact that many students’ only serious study of the humanities takes place in two-year college classrooms.
For the most part, only slender resources are devoted to humanities instruction at community colleges. Community college humanities faculty carrying very full teaching loads, often on part-time or adjunct appointments, have insufficient opportunities for professional development. To mark a new commitment to this vital and growing sector in higher education, the National Endowment for the Humanities in 2011 launched NEH Bridging Cultures at Community Colleges, a program to advance humanities teaching at community colleges through sustained faculty and curriculum development.
Funded projects focus on the theme of Bridging Cultures, an agency-wide initiative that encourages exploration of the ways in which cultures from around the globe, as well as cultures within America’s borders, have influenced American society.
In 2011, five institutions were each awarded up to $360,000 in cooperative agreements for projects to be held in 2012-15. Three additional awards were made in 2012. These projects:
How to Apply
For more information and application instructions, please visit the program website listed above.
Links:
[1] http://ashp.cuny.edu/teaching-and-learning/bridging-historias
[2] mailto:pbender@gc.cuny.edu