Individual Fellow Initiatives
![Orange and Teal PTF Logo](/sites/default/files/styles/medium/public/2023-11/ptf-logo-orange-tricolor_1.png?itok=qurrQVUZ)
Building Rigorously Compassionate Syllabi: Fostering Individual Accountability and Community Care
Our project seeks to revitalize the syllabus document as a tool of inclusion. We are interested in making visible the “hidden curriculum” with which students often struggle. The syllabus language, grading and attendance policies, communication and assignment fulfillment methods, course calendar flexibility, course material formats – these can all contribute to developing personal accountability and investment in community.
![Logo of PTF acronym](/sites/default/files/styles/medium/public/PTF%20Logo-%20orange%20tricolor.png?itok=r5XE4jGA)
Difficult Dialogues Faculty Learning Community
(Project completed 2021) Since its inception at UT in 2006, the Difficult Dialogues (DD) program has worked with over 40 faculty in 8 colleges or schools to develop Difficult Dialogue signature courses, i.e., introductory UGS courses that promote respectful and productive dialogue about difficult and controversial social issues, including race and ethnicity, gender and sexuality, religion, human rights, immigration, evolution, climate change and sustainability, and illness and mortality.
![Logo of PTF acronym](/sites/default/files/styles/medium/public/PTF%20Logo-%20orange%20tricolor.png?itok=r5XE4jGA)
Race and Curriculum Revision Project
While the U.S. is more racially open and culturally diverse than at any other time in its history, intolerance and marginalization—often around issues of race, culture and difference—continue to exist. This is punctuated in university settings where students of color find more access to opportunity, yet encounter socially and intellectually non-inclusive environments. UT-Austin stands at the forefront of concerns around race and equity, most recently with the Fisher decision and the current state lawsuit against UT-Austin regarding race discrimination in admissions.