Micro-Credentials
The program at a glance:
Fi-Sci Faculty Fellows take part in an exciting initiative to interweave literature and STEM. Funded by the Office of Micro-Credentials and the Center for the Advancement of Teaching, fellows design interdisciplinary micro-credential badges.
For scientists who love fiction, literary scholars fascinated by science, and any instructor who wants to sprinkle science over their literature course or season their STEM syllabus with a dash of fiction.
Fellows work in teams of two: one who teaches literature (in any department) and one who teaches in a STEM field. Each team develops a micro-credential badge that fellows will individually implement in one of their upcoming courses.
Meet the Fall 2022 Fellows
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Jeanette Smith
VISITING ASSISTANT TEACHING PROFESSOR OF RELIGIOUS STUDIES; FACULTY FELLOW, HONORS COLLEGE
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Dr. Tigran Abrahamyan
ASSISTANT TEACHING PROFESSOR OF PHYSICS AND ASTRONOMY; FACULTY FELLOW, HONORS COLLEGE
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Dr. Magda Novelli Pearson
INSTRUCTOR OF ITALIAN AND ITALIAN PROGRAM COORDINATOR
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Dr. Prem Chapagain
PROFESSOR OF PHYSICS; DIRECTOR OF THE BIOMOLECULAR SCIENCES INSTITUTE; FACULTY FELLOW, HONORS COLLEGE
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Dr. Alexandra Cornelius
ASSOCIATE TEACHING PROFESSOR OF HISTORY; DIRECTOR OF WOMEN STUDIES
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Dr. Fahad Saeed
ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF COMPUTING AND INFORMATION SCIENCES
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Dr. Medardo Rosario
ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF SPANISH
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Dr. Uma Swamy
TEACHING PROFESSOR OF CHEMISTRY AND BIOCHEMISTRY
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Niurca Márquez
ASSISTANT TEACHING PROFESSOR OF RELIGIOUS STUDIES; FACULTY FELLOW, HONORS COLLEGE
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Dr. Joseph Lichter
ASSOCIATE TEACHING PROFESSOR OF CHEMISTRY AND BIOCHEMISTRY; DIRECTOR OF PRE-HEALTH ADVISING; FACULTY FELLOW, HONORS COLLEGE
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Dr. Nicola Gavioli
ASSOCIATE TEACHING PROFESSOR OF PORTUGUESE
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Dr. Sabyasachi Moulik
ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF CELLULAR BIOLOGY AND PHARMACOLOGY
Featuring workshops with celebrated guest speakers:
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Adrian Bejan, Ph.D.
J. A. JONES DISTINGUISHED PROFESSOR OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERING, DUKE UNIVERSITY
Workshop: Design in Nature — Form and Flow across Disciplines
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Daniel Aureliano Newman, Ph.D.
ASSISTANT PROFESSOR (TEACHING STREAM), DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH, UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO
Workshop: Narrativity in Data Visualization
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James Phelan, Ph.D.
DISTINGUISHED UNIVERSITY PROFESSOR OF ENGLISH, THE OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY
Workshop: Fiction’s Rhetorical Role in Conceptualizations of Science
The program in detail:
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Innovate an interdisciplinary undergraduate curriculum by integrating fi-sci pattern mapping into courses across the university.
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Fi-sci is an analytic framework that involves locating the pattern of a scientific phenomenon in a work of fiction. For instance, astrobiologists commonly refer to a circumstellar habitable area as the Goldilocks Zone, because the science and the fairy tale share a pattern: they both describe conditions that are "just right." Click here to explore more examples of pattern mapping across literature and STEM.
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With “plug-and-play,” portable course content (PCC). PCC is a ready-to-go cluster of lessons that can be interpolated into pre-existing courses in any discipline. One type of PCC is the micro-credential badge. This is a mini course whose completion earns students badges: digital representations of competencies gained. What sets fi-sci micro-credentials apart from existing micro-credentials available to the FIU community is that the former intentionally interweave literature and STEM into an interdisciplinary thread. Bundled in adaptable, self-contained units, intersections of fiction and science can transform the undergraduate classroom experience.
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We learn by analogy: understanding something new by connecting it to something already familiar. An interdisciplinary curriculum is like a welcome banner, encouraging visitors to make new, creative connections.
The PCC model gets interdisciplinarity into places where it would otherwise not exist. Without changing majors, declaring a new minor, or incurring excess credits hours, STEM students in fi-sci badge-adopting courses will have the opportunity to not only interface with the humanities, but assimilate humanistic approaches into their chosen disciplines. Whether they encounter the badge in a humanities course or a STEM course, STEM majors will gain exposure to the humanities that is not perfunctory, but rather fully entwined with their subject of study. Learning for humanities majors improves as well: they see their subject in a new light and observe how it intersects with other fields – what it can offer to the understanding of other subjects. This will enable them to discover novel applications for their humanistic expertise, which can translate into innovative job opportunities.
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Over the course of our pilot Fi-Sci Institute, fellows design original micro-credential badges at the intersections of literature and STEM. Fellows participate in four expert-led workshops with guidance about format and ideas for content:
Workshop A | James Phelan and Rhona Trauvitch: Fiction's Rhetorical Role in Conceptualizations of Science
Workshop B | Bridgette Cram and Eliana Guzman: The Micro-Credentialing Process
Workshop C | Daniel Aureliano Newman: Narrativity in Data Visualization
Workshop D | Adrian Bejan: Design in Nature: Form and Flow across Disciplines
To receive individualized support for their badge's Canvas shell development, each team schedules a consultation about instructional technology and design with Associate Director of Instructional Learning Technology Maikel Right. In Spring 2023, each fellow will implement their new micro-credential badge by aligning it to one of their courses.
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You, if you're an FIU faculty member interested in cross-disciplinary, cutting-edge, creative pedagogy and are willing to integrate your newly designed badge into one of your Spring 2023 courses.
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Via Zoom during Fall 2022.
Fi-Sci Badges Developed and Taught by the ‘22 Cohort
Alexandra Cornelius, Ph.D.
ASSOCIATE TEACHING PROFESSOR
OF HISTORY; DIRECTOR, CENTER FOR WOMEN’S AND GENDER STUDIES, FIU
Nicola Gavioli, Ph.D.
ASSOCIATE TEACHING PROFESSOR
OF PORTUGUESE, FIU
Fahad Saeed, Ph.D.
ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR
OF COMPUTING AND
INFORMATION SCIENCES, FIU
Sabyasachi Moulik, Ph.D.
ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF CELLULAR BIOLOGY AND PHRARMACOLOGY, FIU
Jeanette Smith, J.D.
VISITING ASSISTANT TEACHING PROFESSOR OF RELIGIOUS STUDIES; FACULTY FELLOW, HONORS
COLLEGE, FIU
Tigran Abrahamyan, Ph.D.
ASSISTANT TEACHING PROFESSOR OF PHYSICS AND ASTRONOMY;
FACULTY FELLOW,
HONORS COLLEGE, FIU