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2026 Civic Discourse on Campus Virtual Summit

As colleges and universities work to support student learning and engagement amid an evolving landscape around free speech, academic freedom, and political expression, the need for thoughtful, principled approaches to civic discourse has never been greater.  The 2026 Civic Discourse on Campus Virtual Summit brings together higher education leaders, student affairs professionals, and dialogue practitioners to explore the evolving landscape and share evidence-informed strategies for cultivating healthy campus climates.

Session Schedule

The schedule will be designed to provide attendees with engaging sessions and tangible evidence-based practices. As details are finalized, this schedule will be updated. All times are Eastern Time (GMT-4) and are subject to change. 
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Fri, May 8 at 11:00 am EDT
Civic Discourse: A Crucible Moment for Democracy

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Speakers

Kaye Monk-Morgan, Ed.D., President and CEO

Kansas Leadership Center

Overview

According to a 2023 NACE poll, more than 40% of career services professionals reported using artificial intelligence for work tasks over the last year, but fewer than half reported using it with students. The presenters will educate how advising professionals can implement AI into their discussions with students. In the wake of this new technology, There is now an opportunity to responsibly leverage its benefits in order to educate ourselves on its possibilities, and to advise students in a more impactful and profound way. Learning Outcomes: 1.Participants will be able to understand the impact of AI in higher education and its larger implications through moderated discussion. 2. Participants will feel empowered to discuss the ethics of AI, appropriate usage, and be able to facilitate these discussions with their students. 3. Participants will be able to understand and add to the opportunities for innovation that AI can provide in student career education through interactive discussion and pair-and-share activities.

Fri, May 8 at 12:15 pm EDT
Is Your Campus Built for Constructive Conflict? Assessing Pathways to Stronger Civic Health

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Speakers

Maxine Rich, Program Manager

Common Ground USA

Overview

When tensions rise on campus, the quality of civic discourse is only as strong as the systems beneath it. This interactive session introduces a Resilience Rubric that helps student affairs professionals assess how their campus environment supports constructive engagement. Participants will examine core resilience indicators based on best practices in global conflict resolution and mediation. Through guided reflection, attendees will map where their institution is strong, where vulnerabilities exist, and how civic discourse efforts can align with broader campus culture and well-being initiatives.

Fri, May 8 at 12:15 pm EDT
Can Deliberative Forums Lower the Temperature?

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Speakers

Cristin Brawner, Executive Director

National Issues Forums Institute

Overview

This session will introduce student affairs and higher education professionals to the National Issues Forums Institute’s deliberative model and campus-ready resources. Participants will explore how structured deliberation supports student development by helping students engage complex, values-based issues without shutting down disagreement. Drawing on NIFI issue guides and higher-education partnerships, the session highlights practical strategies for fostering shared sense-making, civic learning, and constructive engagement across difference in residence life, co-curricular programming, classroom forums, and campus dialogues.

Fri, May 8 at 1:30 pm EDT
Leading Through Campus Conflict: A Framework for Responding to Student Demands and Concerns

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Speakers

Aileen Favilla, Program Manager, Campus Free Speech

PEN America

Overview

In tense moments of protest or conflict, student affairs professionals can find themselves on the line to navigate student demands or concerns against institutional policies. This session will introduce the 3 I's Framework (Invite, Identify, and Initiate) as a structured approach to responding to student demands with clarity, empathy, and direction. The framework focuses specifically on understanding the underlying needs driving student demands and developing responsive action plans. It supports administrators in moving beyond reactive decision-making and toward collaborative, trust-building engagement that honors both student voice and institutional realities.

Fri, May 8 at 1:30 pm EDT
From Evidence to Impact: How Research Informs Scalable Civic Dialogue on Campus

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Speakers

Naomi Greenspan, Director of Partnerships

Constructive Dialogue Institute

Overview

Colleges and universities are increasingly investing in civic discourse and dialogue initiatives, yet many struggle to measure whether these efforts meaningfully impact student learning, belonging, or campus climate. The Constructive Dialogue Institute (CDI) uses research not only to evaluate outcomes but to actively shape how civic dialogue is designed, implemented, and scaled on college campuses. In this session, CDI will share how evidence from social science scholarship, UX research, case studies, and program evaluation informs the development and continuous improvement of its dialogue programs. Participants will explore how research-backed approaches to dialogue can help universities move beyond one-off efforts toward sustainable, campus-wide impact.

Fri, May 8 at 2:45 pm EDT
Beyond Good Conversations: Measuring and Acting on Civic Discourse Impact::Summit Session

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Speakers

Kathryn Cilano, Director, Center for Leadership and Civic Engagement

Rochester Institute of Technology

Overview

Institutions invest in civic discourse initiatives yet often struggle to translate participation data into sustained impact. This session explores how RITA's Center for Leadership & Civic Engagement used assessment findings from Horizons, a deliberative dialogue series grounded in the National Issues Forum Institute model, to redesign civic discourse delivery. Participants will examine how data-informed a shift from one-off dialogues to cohort-based learning and a credit-bearing course, offering a practical framework for measuring impact, closing feedback loops, and scaling civic discourse as a core leadership competency.

Fri, May 8 at 2:45 pm EDT
Building Sustainable Campus Collaborations

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Speakers

Cathy Copeland, Program Director of Campuswide Immersion

Institute for Citizens and Scholars

Overview

Sustainable innovation for civic discourse on campus doesn't happen in isolation. This session explores practical strategies for building long-term, mutually beneficial partnerships between staff, faculty, and institutional leadership. Drawing on examples from the Institute for Citizens & Scholars cohort of 41 institutions, we'll look at how to design programs with shared ownership, clear communication channels, and built-in assessment structures that help initiatives grow rather than fade. Participants will leave with frameworks for cultivating cross-campus alliances, securing administrative support, and embedding evaluation practices that make collaborative work both durable and scalable.

Fri, May 8 at 4:00 pm EDT
Building Essential Skills for Civic Life and Leadership

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Speakers

Jason Bosch, Ed.D., Director of Curriculum Innovation

Kansas Leadership Center

Overview

Civic leadership requires an attitude of curiosity, a focus on learning, and a skill set to effectively mobilize people to work together on tough civic challenges. Since 2007, the Kansas Leadership Center (KLC) has been equipping individuals, organizations, and communities with the skills and collective capacities to make progress on tough civic challenges. Through our practice and research, we have built a wealth of knowledge and expertise about the skills needed for effective leadership in civic life, and how to build people’s capacity to learn and use those skills. Dr. Jason Bosch, KLC Director of Curriculum Innovation, will introduce participants to KLC's leadership framework and share examples of how KLC has partnered with institutions around the country to build capacity for civic leadership, from the student body to the president's office.

Fri, May 8 at 4:00 pm EDT
State and Federal Policy Trends in Civic Discourse

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Speakers

Jill Dunlap, Ph.D., Assistant Vice President of Research, Policy, and Civic Engagement

NASPA

Overview

There is an increased focus by policymakers at the federal and state levels on implementing and expanding civic discourse in higher education. These efforts take many forms, from including civic discourse skills in the classroom curriculum to standing up civic discourse offices on campuses. This session will provide an overview of those trends at the state level as well as the federal level and what they mean for campus administrators.


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