PSI schedule

From NewlyPossible.org

Because you and your colleagues will largely determine the direction (and the success) of this course, this schedule is nascent and tentative.

January 19th: Class 1

1025 Jeffries Hall or online

  1. Read Peace Corps Theory of Change and Logic Model.
  2. Read Questions for the Revised Bloom's Taxonomy.
  3. Read the syllabus.
  4. Read How Governments Can Promote Automated Driving, New Mex. L. Rev. (2016) (part III only).
  5. Read How Reporters Can Evaluate Automated Driving Announcements, 2020 Journal of Law and Mobility 1 (2020).
  6. Read this substantive introduction to our course topic. This introductory draft is merely a cursory overview intended to ground your research and spark your thinking. (You should of course cite your sources.)
  7. Watch .....
  8. Prepare a two-minute talk introducing us to something interesting or important from or about your discipline that others might not know.
  9. Use NameCoach on Canvas to record your name, provide a phonetic spelling, and indicate (in brackets after the phonetic spelling) your pronouns.
  10. Read the biographies of your colleagues that will be provided shortly before our first class.
    1. For each of your colleagues, prepare a unique question you could ask to learn something meaningful about them.
    2. Prepare question that someone could ask you to learn something meaningful about you?

January 26th: Class 2

Problem-solving bootcamp in 1225 Jeffries Hall or by arrangement with Bridgette Carr

  1. Watch this one-hour Mural training video.
  2. Read the Interviewing for Insights on Canvas (under Files).
  3. Prepare, and bring to class, three to five questions in each of the following categories to ask your professor to learn more about your problem statement:
    1. Descriptive (Broad, Open, Evokes Storytelling)
    2. Structural (Specific, In-depth, Use to Categorize)
    3. Contrast (Clarity, Understand Relationships, Understand How Terms Are Used)
  4. In preparation for class five, research our general topic and identify information, resources, experts, and questions within your discipline. You may do so individually or in a group.

February 2nd: Class 3

Problem-solving bootcamp in 1225 Jeffries Hall or by arrangement with Bridgette Carr

  1. Organize, and bring to class, your notes from your professor interview.
  2. In no more than one page, prepare individual answers to the questions that your group prepared for your faculty interview. (Everyone brings expertise, information, and assumptions about the problem we are trying to solve, and it is important to document those at the beginning of our process.)
  3. Watch the Ecosystem Mapping video on Canvas (under Files).
  4. Complete the first version of your Ecosystem Map on Mural.
  5. Complete the entire "Social Identities, Power, and Privilege" module of Collaborating for Change. You will likely need to register for edX using your U-M credentials; click the "Free Access" U-M logo button at the top of your screen on the MOOC landing page. You do not need to pay to access the MOOC: If a popup with the notification "pursue a verified certificate" appears on your screen while you are completing the MOOC sections, just click on "Back to course" at the top of your screen and continue through the sections. You do not need to "upgrade for $49" to complete this assignment.
  6. Complete, and bring to class, the Social Identity Wheel on Canvas (under Files). The social identity wheel that you complete is for your own reflection only; you need not submit or otherwise share it.
  7. In preparation for class five, continue to research our general topic and identify information, resources, experts, and questions principally (though not necessarily exclusively) within your discipline. You may do so individually or in a group of your choice.

February 9th: Class 4

Problem-solving bootcamp in 1225 Jeffries Hall or by arrangement with Bridgette Carr

  1. Work with your group to identify the "How Might We" statement you want to use for Ideation. Put your chosen statement through the faucet. We will use your "How Might We" statement as the foundation for this last class of our problem-solving bootcamp.
  2. In preparation for class five, continue to research our general topic and identify information, resources, experts, and questions principally (though not necessarily exclusively) within your discipline. You may do so individually or in a group of your choice.

February 16th: Class 5

1025 Jeffries Hall or online

February 23rd: Class 6 (before winter break)

1025 Jeffries Hall or online

March 9th: Class 7 (after winter break)

1025 Jeffries Hall or online

March 11th: First bootcamp gateway

In Mural, create a new ecosystem process map for your team (do not copy your map from the bootcamp) and complete the Ecosystem/Stakeholder Mapping and Interview Synthesis sections (even if you have yet completed all your expert interviews).

March 16th: Class 8

1025 Jeffries Hall or online

March 23rd: Class 9

1025 Jeffries Hall or online

March 30th: Class 10

1025 Jeffries Hall or online

April 1st: Second bootcamp gateway

Complete the Ideate and Prototype sections of your ecosystem process map (even if you have not yet collected all your feedback).

April 6th: Class 11

1025 Jeffries Hall or online

April 13th: Class 12

1025 Jeffries Hall or online

April 20th: Class 13

1025 Jeffries Hall or online

April 25th: Third bootcamp gateway

Complete your entire ecosystem process map. The Storyboarding section is optional and may be helpful in preparing your capstone deliverable.