SESSION DESCRIPTION

Microaggressions are common, small-scale insults that are often unintentional, but have a significant impact on those receiving them that builds up over time. Left unaddressed, repeated microaggressions erode safety and trust in any environment. In this interactive and engaging 90-minute workshop, participants learned to recognize unintentional microaggressions, understand microaggressions in the context of systemic inequality, and began to practice ways of interrupting and addressing microaggressions restoratively rather than punitively.

 

RESOURCES

Session Presentation (PDF)

Session Recording

Microaggressions Handout (PDF)

Microaggressions” 2-minute video

Racial Microaggressions in Everyday Life,” by Derald Wing Sue 

Microaggressions: More Than Just Race,” by Derald Wing Sue 

 

PRESENTERS

Headshot for T.J. Jourian (he/him)

 

 

 

 

 

T.J. Jourian (he/him) is a versatile scholar, educator, consultant, and trainer with a decade of experience in student affairs. His consulting portfolio encompasses assessment and strategic planning for professional associations and nonprofits. Grounded in the experiences and knowledge of trans and queer people of color, his research focuses on race, gender, and sexuality in higher education, particularly examining masculinity, trans masculine students, and gender and sexuality centers on campuses. T.J. holds a Master’s in student affairs administration (with a multicultural education cognate) from Michigan State University and a Ph.D. in higher education from Loyola University Chicago. 

 

Headshot for Romina Pacheco (she/ella)

 

 

 

 

 

Romina Pacheco (she/ella) is the Director of Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Belonging at the Windward School. With decades of educational leadership experience, she facilitates learning on equity and social justice. Romina, a DEIB expert in K-12, higher ed, and nonprofits, draws from her Afro-Latina immigrant background to foster Curriculum & Instruction and Women’s Studies from New Mexico State University and an M.Ed. in Social Justice Education from UMass-Amherst.

 

Headshot for Jay Botsford (ze/zir or they/them)

 

 

 

 

 

Jay Botsford (ze/zir or they/them) has been dedicated to advocating for LGBTQ+ communities since 2002. Providing equity- and justice-focused training and consulting to service providers and institutions, Jay supports the leadership of those most impacted in effecting change within their communities and has extensive experience in the higher education, healthcare, and nonprofit sectors. Ze holds an MPH, with a focus on health equity and justice, and is passionate about community care, building accomplices (not just allies), and prioritizing healing in justice work. 

Logo for Think Again Training & Consulting (TATC)

 

 

 

 

 

Think Again Training and Consulting supports purpose-driven organizations that believe in equity, inclusion, and justice. We envision a world in which ecosystems* of organizations, communities, networks, and individuals collaborate to transform themselves and broader systems to continually move toward a world of fair, plentiful, joyful, and connected living and working conditions for all. Our purpose is to build the capacity of ecosystems to address internal and external systemic inequities with strategies to collaborate for meaningful change. We do this through: 

     – tailored and interactive trainings designed to address your organization’s specific needs and context 

     – customized consulting packages** to help your organization incorporate tools for equity, inclusion, and justice into your policies, programs,  and practices 

* By ecosystems, we mean that these organizations, communities, networks and individuals are in complex, multidirectional, self-reinforcing relationships.  

** Consulting packages can include strategic planning, assessment/evaluation, policy development, leadership development and implementation support.