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Addressing Chilly Climates in Academic Settings

Understanding and addressing "chilly climates" in academic environments is crucial to creating fair and inclusive spaces. These climates, characterized by subtle discriminatory behaviors, can harm certain groups. Strategies like awareness, climate surveys, and training can help create a more hospitable atmosphere for all. Various resources and studies provide insights and guidance on combating microaggressions and fostering positive classroom dynamics.

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Addressing Chilly Climates in Academic Settings

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  1. School of Politics, University of Nottingham, 2/11/16 How we create “chilly climates” in our classrooms, and what to do about them Ian James Kidd ian.kidd@nottingham.ac.uk

  2. ‘Chilly climates’ ‘Chilly climates’ Any social group has a background ‘climate’, experienced by some as hospitable, by others as hostile. “…a range of informal practices and implicit policies which, despite their relative subtlety and the fact that they may not be intended as harmful, do systematically disadvantage women relative to men” Prof Alison Wylie “…myriad unconscious diminishing behaviours…” Jennifer Oullette

  3. ‘Chilly climates’ ‘Chilly climates’ Chilly climates result from many, small, subtle, unconscious, (usually) unintended behaviours, as well as starker incidents. 1. Hard to describe, explain, ‘put your finger on’. 2. Easy for others to ignore, dismiss, ‘pass off’. 3. Easy for people to suppose they are not guilty of acting in ‘chilling ways’

  4. Microaggression Microaggression A small, subtle, individually incidental, but cumulatively destructive type of discriminative social behaviour. • Avoidant body language • Discussions o o o Interruption patterns Domination ‘Corrections’ • Questions o First- and second-order questions o ‘Speaking for your race’ o Waiting times for answers • Speech-content o Examples o Jokes

  5. Changing climates Changing climates Chilly climates pose special problems: Credit: Prof Shannon Dea 1. The capacity of academics belonging to privileged groups to detect a chilly climate is limited. 2. The Nice Bloke Trap, naively presupposing a warm climate, and resisting evidence to the contrary.

  6. The The N Nice ice B Bloke Trap loke Trap “Things seem fine here to me …” “I don’t think our climate is a chilly one for women…” “Other places might have these problems, but not us, not here…” I’m not sexist or racist and I don’t discriminate against my students!” “If we did have a ‘climate problem’, we’d know about it…” “I’m a nice bloke, and so are my colleagues…” “It’s suspicious that these students can’t ever be specific in these claims…”

  7. Advice Advice The ideal is a hospitable climate for all, achieved by identifying and avoiding microaggressive, chilling behaviours. 1. Inform staff and students about chilly climates 2. Run a climate survey 3. Build chilly climate training into PG and teacher training

  8. Useful sources Useful sources • Bernice Sandler, ‘The Chilly Climate’, https://sun.iwu.edu/~mgardner/Articles/chillyclimate.pdf • Bernice Sandler, ‘Eight Ways to Warm up the Chilly Climate: Recommendations for Faculty Members’, http://www.whoi.edu/images/gepac/18_ways_to_warm_up.pdf • Bernice Sandler, ‘The Chilly Climate: Subtle Ways in which Women are Often Treated Differentily at Work and in Classrooms’, http://www.napequity.org/nape-content/uploads/R1l-The-Chilly-Climate.pdf • ‘Tool: Recognising Microaggressions and the Messages They Send’, http://academicaffairs.ucsc.edu/events/documents/Microaggressions_Examples_Arial_2014_11_12.pdf • Heben Nigatu, ‘21 Racial Microaggressions You Hear on a Daily Basis’, Buzzfeed.com, https://www.buzzfeed.com/hnigatu/racial- microagressions-you-hear-on-a-daily-basis?utm_term=.huXkkyGOEd#.etoyyG5bmA • Hatch Discussion Guides, ‘Microaggression Workshop’, http://media.sheknows.com/article-downloads/hatch-discussion-guide.pdf

  9. Videos Videos • “If Microaggressions Happened to White People”, MTV News https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KPRA4g-3yEk • “What Kind of Asian Are You?” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DWynJkN5HbQ&app=desktop • But NOT this video or its comments thread: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=meT-8a83Pfw

  10. Disciplinary blogs and websites Disciplinary blogs and websites Philosophy blogs Philosophy blogs • https://beingawomaninphilosophy.wordpress.com • https://beingaphilosopherofcolor.wordpress.com/ • https://whatweredoingaboutwhatitslike.wordpress.com Websites Websites • www.breakingprejudice.org – click on ‘Teaching’ for definitions, podcasts, video clips, resources • www.microaggressions.com – click on ‘About’ and ‘Discussion’

  11. Academic studies Academic studies • Boysen, Guy (2012) ‘Teacher and student perceptions of microaggressions in college classrooms’, College Teaching 60.3: 122-129. • Chilly Collective (ed.), Breaking Anonymity: The Chilly Climate for Women Faculty (Waterloo: Wilfred Laurier University Press) [the classic study] • Nadals, Kevin et al (2014) ‘The adverse impact of racial microaggressions on college students’ self-esteem’, Journal of College Student Development 55.5: 461-474. • Sue, D.W. (2010) Microaggressions in Everyday life: Race, Gender, and Sexual Orientation (New York: John Wiley) • Saul, Jennifer (2014) ‘Stop thinking so much about sexual harassment’, Journal of Applied Philosophy 31.3: 307-321. • Williams, Lena (2000). It's the Little Things (New York: Harcourt).

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