| University | Semester | Year | Course | Department | Instructor(s) | Students Enrolled |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| University of Cincinnati | Spring | 2026 | Doing Good Together– Student Philanthropy Studio | Honors / College of Design, Architecture, Art and Planning / College of Cooperative Education Professional Studies | Flávia Bastos, Robin Selzer | 15 students |
Flávia Bastos is a Distinguished Research Professor in the Arts and Humanities. She has edited and published books and several articles and has lectured extensively in the United States and abroad. Her leadership roles in academia include Graduate Program Director in the Art Education program, founder of the Latino Faculty Association, Executive Director of the Emeriti Association, Interim Associate Dean of the Graduate School, and Provost Fellow. Her most recent book Promoting Civic Engagement through Art Education was published by Routledge in 2025. She received the University of Cincinnati Foundation 2024 Rieveschl Staff of Merit Award for her pioneering a student philanthropy course at the university. www.flaviabastos.com
Unique Course Components
- Interdisciplinary course within the Honors Program, Professional Development, and Art Education Departments.
- The use of the term “studio” reflects creative ways of experiential learning, and it is borrowed from design and the arts to emphasize the process of developing and implementing an idea or concept.
- Offered in collaboration with UC Foundation, with the Foundation funding part of the course.
- Each student creates a Values Board, a critical assignment in preparation for the Public Narrative assignment (story of self, story of us, story of now) where students define their values, and explain how their giving can be guided by their own passions, and how those values and passions align with the community.
- Student teams orally deliver persuasive “Public Narratives” that communicate the value of philanthropic organizations to stakeholders as an exercise of leadership aimed at motivating others to join in action on behalf of a shared purpose. The narrative incorporates the stories of others as well as the student’s own.
- Student teams will create a Public Narrative based on their chosen philanthropic organization to advocate for a cause and compete for funding.
- Organizations to be funded are determined by a vote following the presentations.
- Among other Philanthropy Lab tasks such a pre-course survey and giving goals, students receive course credit for emailing an invitation to President Pinto, encouraging him to attend the Giving Ceremony.
- At the end of the semester, each student records a short video reflection (1–2 minutes) that synthesizes their key takeaways and overall experience in the course. The video briefly addresses what students learned about philanthropy and community engagement, how the experiential components of the course, including reflection journal, site visits, teamwork, community engagement—influenced their understanding, and what insights they are carrying forward.
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