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How does it sound to drink a beer that also GIVES BACK?!If these are two things you value, you're in the right place today!Jess Mitchell is a Brewer at Kinship Brewing Co. who just came out with her own West Coast IPA brew, Scars are Beautiful, where $1 of each beer goes back to The Blessing Box Project, a non-profit dedicated to helping mastectomy patients after surgery.Scars are beautiful. Now click play and support a cause through your beer choices!You guys have to go check out Jess and what she is doing with Fighting Through Kinship – it's amazing what you can accomplish when you find your passion! And tag us when you get your hands on a Scars Are Beautiful brew @kinshipbeer and @itsbingbang… we'd love to see you sipping for a cause.
Jess Mitchell joined me to talk about inclusive design. She describes her perspective as having always wondered why some and not others, why us and not them, and how that perspective has led her to "see ethical lines drawn through decisions manifested throughout our world - in the design of everyday experiences and expectations for behaviour, and how we could do it all differently."
Jess Mitchell and I have a great conversation about disrupting education and feeling like an imposter and intruder. Enjoy.★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
Jess Mitchell and I have a great conversation about disrupting education and feeling like an… The post Episode 58 Jess Mitchell and Inclusive Design appeared first on Praxis Pedagogy.
Jess Mitchell is a Senior Manager, Research & Design at the Inclusive Design Research Centre, a writer and a critical thinker with a fondness for things in 3’s. We took the opportunity to call Jess up and dive into some hot topics with her around inclusion and diversity, working from home, representation and finding courage in the world we live in today. Connect with Jess on Twitter or Medium @jesshmitchell
The boys talk about who knows what during the pre-show and then are joined by Jess Mitchell from Brewskys for a 4th of July Cook Out Draft. We draft our favorite meat, side, dessert, and yard game to make the best cook out possible. This spark an argument between AP and Dayna, but as always the show must go on. To ease the tension, we bring on a special guest that sometimes goes by Hurricane and he provides facts about his new home city. Finally, Ryan asks each of us some questions about each of the hosts to see who is the best and worst of the friends.
In this episode we have a long pre-show discussion about who knows what. Dayna takes us down so many tangents it was hard to keep up. Dayna is set to do the HOT CHIP CHALLENGE and AP adds his five songs to Endless Radio. Finally, Jess Mitchell from Brewsky's joins us to discuss business negotiations and memories from our new sponsor. Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/yglmtpod/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/YGLMT
Noted contrarian Jess Mitchell (@jesshmitchell). Senior Manager, Research + Design at the Inclusive Design Research Centre at OCADu. Next week Jess will offer up the closing keynote for the Digital Pedagogy Lab Toronto (@DigPedLab). Terry and Jess chat about her thoughts about that upcoming talk and where it's coming from, and the waterfowl that live outside her window.
Noted contrarian Jess Mitchell (@jesshmitchell). Senior Manager, Research + Design at the Inclusive Design Research Centre at OCADu. Next week Jess will offer up the closing keynote for the Digital Pedagogy Lab Toronto (@DigPedLab). Terry and Jess chat about her thoughts about that upcoming talk and where it's coming from, and the waterfowl that live outside her window.
My guest is Jess Mitchell of the Inclusive Design Research Centre. Jess provides a set of practical resources to help improve inclusiveness in open education. Jess and I have licensed our comments under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. As a companion to this episode, you may also wish to view Jess’s talk at … Continue reading 11. How Can OER Be More Inclusive? →
Open educational resources have been around for more than a decade, and the sheer number of these materials—in the form of textbooks, courses, videos, software and other public-domain resources—are increasingly available online. . But as more open materials become accessible, advocates for open education still see room for improvement. This week on the EdSurge On Air podcast, we hear from Jess Mitchell, a senior manager of research and design at the Inclusive Design Research Centre at OCAD University, and Kent McGuire, director of the Education Program at William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, who both keynoted the OpenEd conference in New York earlier this month and shared ideas on where the open movement is headed.
Terry Greene (@greeneerry) speaks with Jess Mitchell (@jesshmitchell) from the Inclusive Design Research Centre at OCADu. We chat about the amazing work they are doing globally with things like the Social Justice Repair Kits and the FLOE Project.
Terry Greene (@greeneerry) speaks with Jess Mitchell (@jesshmitchell) from the Inclusive Design Research Centre at OCADu. We chat about the amazing work they are doing globally with things like the Social Justice Repair Kits and the FLOE Project.
In this Episode Jess Mitchell talks to Richard Fung about Gender. Conversation starts with the definition of gender and the reason of gender identification, and goes on to the history of gay, lesbian liberation and trans identity. They continue on how today’s western society looks at gender, and how new generation define their gender as non-binary more than ever. They also talk about commonality and different cultural and historical barriers in defining gender, and how inclusion can widen the society to include all genders and start non-binary moves.
In this Episode Jess Mitchell talks to Richard Fung about Gender. Conversation starts with the definition of gender and the reason of gender identification, and goes on to the history of gay, lesbian liberation and trans identity. They continue on how today's western society looks at gender, and how new generation define their gender as non-binary more than ever. They also talk about commonality and different cultural and historical barriers in defining gender, and how inclusion can widen the society to include all genders and start non-binary moves.