This course is designed to introduce educators (including faculty, staff, advisors, and librarians) to the history, politics, and key terms of neurodiversity and its relevance to higher education. Participants will explore the origins of neurodiversity in the Autistic advocacy community, learn the histories and definitions of key terms such as "neurodiversity", "neurodivergent", and "neurotypical" and explore the relevance of disability law and policy to neurodiversity. First-person perspectives from neurodivergent students and staff as well as classroom case studies provide real-world reference points and applications for this background. This course is ideal for educators who are looking to build their foundational knowledge of neurodiversity and set goals for working toward greater inclusion.

Course learning goals

  • Define key terms related to neurodiversity
  • Recognize the roots of neurodiversity in Autistic activism
  • Explore the relationship between disability law & policy and neurodiversity
  • Engage with first-person narratives of neurodivergent students and staff in higher education
  • Practice navigating learning scenarios involving neurodiversity through case studies
  • Reflect on your own relationship to neurodiversity and draft goals for working toward greater inclusion
Course author information
Sarah Silverman, PhD is an instructional designer and instructor of Disability Studies. As an autistic educator, she has a personal stake in Neurodiversity as well as extensive college teaching and faculty development experience. Sarah provides training and consulting about the relevance of neurodiversity in higher education with a focus on the history of neurodiversity as a social justice movement. Her writings appear in To Improve the Academy, the Journal of Interactive Technology and Pedagogy, the blog Feminist Pedagogy for Teaching Online, New Directions for Teaching and Learning, and on her blog at beyondthescope.substack.com.