Speaker
Jasmine Cheng
Student, Center for Educational Opportunity (CeO), UW–Madison
Jasmine Cheng is a second-year pre-med student working toward a Bachelor of Science degree with a major in Human Development and Family Studies, and she has recently completed an Asian American Studies Certificate with an HMoob Emphasis. Furthermore, she is an active scholar in the Center for Educational Opportunities (CeO) program at UW–Madison. CeO has also given her the opportunity to work as a Peer Mentor for first-year students, working alongside many other HMoob scholars and allowing her to connect on a deeper level and share her experiences as a first-generation HMoob student. Additionally, Ms. Cheng currently works as a residential mentor for PEOPLE Summer University, where she mentors a large community of students from historically underrepresented populations as they experience UW–Madison for the first time.
Speaking in
Stitching Together Student Support: Pedagogy & Retention in a Hmoob Studies Classroom
Building on the experiences of two Hmong American undergraduates and a lecturer for the Asian American Studies Program, this session will use both quantitative and qualitative approaches to consider the role that the classroom can play as a nexus of both pedagogy and student support. As the largest Asian American group in the state, UW-Madison’s Hmong American students represent a vibrant but underrepresented and underserved population, rendering this discussion relevant and urgent to the work of building community at our institution. Thus, this session will encourage participants to challenge themselves through paj ntaub, a Hmong textile art that reminds the maker of the importance of stitching together support for our diverse student body across all elements of the university. In doing so, we might transform the classroom from a place in which support is needed to a place that can simultaneously contribute to retention and belonging.
Session Objectives
- Reflect on the transformative potential of identity-specific curriculum as a form of student support
- Reconsider the role of the ethnic studies requirement as a form of institutional investment in student belonging
- Recognize the importance of the classroom as a key space of inclusion and belonging for refugees and other underrepresented students
- Think through the ways that pedagogy can be interwoven with other student-focused initiatives to create a feeling of mutual understanding and belonging