Kasey's Portfolio:
Written Reflection

Values Aligned Syllabus Review

CO 5040 Diversity and Advocacy in Helping Professions

When I examine my syllabus, I see evidence of my values in both explicit and implicit ways. Critical thinking is reflected in assignments that ask students to analyze, question assumptions, synthesize perspectives, and engage thoughtfully with evidence rather than simply memorize information. The structure of discussions and written work encourages intellectual curiosity and reflection rather than passive consumption of content.

Equity and access appear in the flexibility and transparency of course policies. Clear expectations, varied methods of engagement, attention to accessibility, and responsiveness to differing student circumstances communicate that learning should be possible for all students, not only those already positioned for success within traditional academic systems. Choices around deadlines, participation formats, resource availability, and inclusive language all signal what kinds of students are imagined as belonging in the course.

Integrity is communicated not only through academic honesty policies, but through the broader culture of accountability, respect, and ethical engagement embedded in the course. Expectations around citation, collaboration, dialogue, and self-reflection frame integrity as part of scholarly identity rather than simply rule compliance.

The values are perhaps most visible in the systems of interaction within the classroom community. How students are invited to speak, disagree, ask questions, seek support, and participate in collective learning communicates the lived values of the course more powerfully than policy statements alone.

At the same time, this reflection raises the question of whether these commitments are sufficiently visible to students. Many values remain implied rather than directly named. Making them clearer might involve explicitly identifying core course values in the syllabus introduction, connecting policies to pedagogical purposes, and helping students understand why certain structures exist. For example, explaining that flexibility supports equitable access, or that discussion protocols are designed to foster critical inquiry and mutual respect, can make the ethical architecture of the course more transparent.

 

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