Classrooms in the Maricopa County Community College District are not expected to be open to students until 2022, but students are being encouraged to open their minds and begin their journey to humility beginning August 11. That’s when the District Office of Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Engagement will begin offering new Cultural Humility and Equity Hours.
Faculty and Governing Board members are also invited to participate in various hour-long discussions covering everything from
Racelighting and Critical Race Theory (CRT), offered by Professor Rod Golden to
The Shift of Political Parties in the US with Professor John Coughlin.
Cultural Humility is described as the process through which an individual engages in self-critique. Cultural Humility for white individuals would include acceptance of the belief that they are oppressors.
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Overall, 56 percent of classes across the 10 colleges will be offered in an online format, with 36 percent in-person and hybrid, according to the district. Another eight percent are in other formats like field-based study or independent study.
The in-person hybrid category includes classes with an in-person component, such as a weekly class meeting, while part of the class is virtual. Fully in-person classes will comprise only 19 percent of the district s classes.
The distribution of in-person-to-online classes varies widely across the colleges: Chandler Gilbert Community College, for instance, will have 62.4 percent of its classes as in-person and hybrid, while Mesa Community College will have only 38.2 percent in that category. Conversely, CGCC will have 34.7 percent of classes online, a category that includes online, live online, [and] hybrid virtual, while MCC will have 53.6 percent of classes online.