Community Read

Book cover & 2 QR codes
Braiding Sweetgrass: QR Links to Resources

Community Read is a program of the Faculty Senate's First Year Experience Committee (co-chairs Kristin Poling and Michael McDonald), similar to NEA's , to consider vital topics across disciplines.

We are pleased to announce the campus Community Read selection for the 2025-2026 academic year: , by Robin Wall Kimmerer. Braiding Sweetgrass celebrates the more-than-human communities of care of which we are all part. Kimmerer, a botanist and enrolled member of the Citizen Potawatomi Nation, explores how Indigenous ways of knowing can transform our relationships to the land, from gardening to parenting or scientific practice. 

This reading aligns with several new initiatives from the Office of Holistic Excellence (OHE), projects based on Native ways of knowing and storytelling and a new campus Native Land Acknowledgement plaque. The book also aligns with an Inclusive History Project, planting Native plants and gardens at the Environmental Interpretive Center.

Braiding Sweetgrass  is freely available as an  and  through the Mardigian Library. For class use, the short chapters on varying topics can be assigned in many different disciplines. 

Please don't hesitate to reach out to any of the members of the FYE Committee (listed below) with questions or suggestions.  We look forward to our collaboration throughout the next year!  

Our campus Community Read selection for the 2024-2025 academic year was , by Mike Caulfield and Sam Wineburg, 2023. Verified offers an evidence-based approach to web literacy to help readers develop concrete strategies for navigating text, images, and videos--skills even more crucial with increased use of AI images and text. The book offers suggested methods, and , plus specific techniques for Google searches, deceptive videos, TikTok trends, and stealth advertising. If you are considering adopting Verified in any of your courses, please request an instructor ebook from or request a . You can listen to an with co-author Mike Caulfield on the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast and explore thison lateral reading from Wineburg鈥檚 Civic Online Reasoning program (access is free with registration).

Our reading for 2023-2024 was Hadha Baladuna: Arab American Narratives of Boundary and Belonging, by Ghassan Zeineddine, Nabeel Abraham, and Sally Howell.  In 2022-2023,we read All We Can Save, 60 essays and poems related to the climate crisis, edited by Ayana Elizabeth Johnson and Katharine K. Wilkinson, part of the  In 2021-2022 we read William D. Lopez's Separated: Family and Community in the Aftermath of an Immigration Raid, tracing economic, social, psychological, health, and educational fallout from a 2013 ICE raid in Washtenaw County, Michigan. Dr. Lopez is assistant professor at the 51视频 School of Public Health. Our 2020-2021 book was How to Be an Antiracist, by Ibram X. Kendi. Faculty members created videos on book chapters for class use, now on the  playlist, and Mardigian Library posted . Our first selection, 2019-2020, was Rebecca Skloot's The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, the woman whose famed HeLa cells underlie countless medical breakthroughs.