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Session Submission Type: Preconference
Amid ongoing political pressures, shifting student expectations, and the day-to-day demands of teaching in a time of backlash, this Preconference Workshop offers a rare chance to step back from the immediacy of the classroom and consider the broader horizon of sociological education. It is an invitation to pause, take stock, and think strategically about the future we want to build–one in which our pedagogy not only withstands the challenges of the moment but helps shape the classrooms and communities we aspire to build. Through roundtables, presentations, and networking conversations, participants will explore how technological change, political polarization, threats to academic freedom, and questions of disciplinary legitimacy are reshaping our work. Together, we will share concrete strategies for designing supportive learning environments, sustaining our teaching labor, and demonstrating sociology’s public value. Our goal is for attendees to leave with renewed clarity, practical tools, and a sense of collective purpose—ready to move from retrenchment toward possibility in the teaching of sociology.
Brian Powell, Indiana University-Bloomington
Evan Wilson Lauteria, University of Florida
Diane Zablotsky, Univ of North Carolina-Charlotte
Martha A. Martinez, DePaul University
Benjamin Gallati, Indiana University-Bloomington
Eleanor Townsley, Mount Holyoke College
Lindsay Hamm, Purdue University
Stephanie L Bradley, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Danielle V. Schoon, The Ohio State University
Ann M. Beutel, University of Oklahoma
Stephanie Medley-Rath, Indiana University-Kokomo
Myron T. Strong, Community College of Baltimore County
Sarah K.S. Shannon, University of Georgia
Diana Graizbord, University of Georgia