Implicit Bias Training for the General Public

Companies, teachers, lawyers, judges, students - no matter your environment, learn how to manage bias in your community.

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About This Course

Unconscious bias—everyone has it. But that doesn’t make us bad; it makes us human. While we cannot completely rid ourselves of unconscious bias, we can learn how to recognize it and lessen its impact in the workplace. These are skills that everyone can learn.

Upon successful completion of course content 80% or greater a certificate will be awarded.

  • JUS offers a course evaluation at the end of the course. 
  • Completing the evaluation helps JUS to improve the courses.

Length: 10 weeks per block

Effort: 1-2 hours/week

Subject: Implicit Bias

What You'll Learn

BLOCK I

The Origins of Race: How it Situates Our Cognition

The aim of Block II is to discuss the origins of race and how race situates our cognition about people.

Upon completion of this 10-week unit, the participant will be able to:

Introduction

Section I.      Race as a social construct: separation for a purpose: everyone is African

Section II:     How we navigate race: segregation as a driver of economy

Section III:    How we navigate space: land ownership decides voting rights

Section IV:    How voting rights decide space

Section V:     How space decides the economy

Section VI:    How the economy decides power through subjugating different races

Section VII:   The cognition of race: how it affects and shapes human behavior: the perpetual shaping of human behavior grounded in racial constructs

Section VIII:  Recognizing and understanding human behavior’s response to centuries of 

segregation and oppression

Section IX:     The intersection of race, space, and hate

Section X:     Conclusion: The cumulative effect of race, space and hate

BLOCK II

The History of Americas’ White Supremacy

The aim of Block II is to discover the history of Americas’ white supremacy foundation.

Upon completion of this 10-week unit, the participant will be able to:

Introduction

Section I: The Emancipation Proclamation

Section II: The effects of Eugenics

Section III: Birth of a Nation: Woodrow Wilson and D.W. Griffith

Section IV: Racial Integrity Laws; Plessy vs. Ferguson

Section V: The Trail of Tears; dispossession of land

Section VI: White Supremacy and Alien Land Laws

Section VII: The 19th Amendment, voting and election laws

Section VIII: Brown vs. the Board of Education

Section IX: Segregation and Jim Crow Laws

Section X: Conclusion

This block is not open for enrollment yet. Sign up to our email list to get notified as soon as enrollment opens.

BLOCK III

How Systemic Racism Shapes a People: Our Crimes in Our Hate

The aim of Block II is to understand how systemic racism shapes a people: our crimes in our hate.

Upon completion of this 10-week unit, the participant will be able to:

Introduction

Section I: Lasting impressions of Birth of a Nation

Section II: When the system is top down: what is the framework of governance?

Section III: History of America’s justice system framing oppression against minorities, especially Black, Indigenous, People of Color (BIPOC)

Section IV: Federal Housing Administration, Restrictive Covenants and Redlining

Section V: HUD and discrimination in mortgage lending

Section VI: The oppression of travel: The Negro Motorist Green Book and beyond

Section VII: The legacy of a Black Wealth Gap in perpetuity

Section VIII: Buffalo Soldiers: Indian Code Talking: Tuskegee Airmen

Section IX:  The effects of intentionally lost American historical content: Christopher Columbus

Section X:  Conclusion

 

This block is not open for enrollment yet. Sign up to our email list to get notified as soon as enrollment opens.

BLOCK IV

ReChanneling the Brain to Unhate

The aim of Block IV is an attempt to re-channel the brain to unhate.

Upon completion of this 10-week unit, the participant will be able to:

Introduction

Section I: Creola Katherine Johnson and Dorothy Vaughan and Mary Jackson: Nasa Mathematicians

Section II: Vivien Thomas and Dr. Alfred Blalock: Blue Baby Syndrome

Section III: Dr. Charles Drew: processing and preserving blood plasma: : George Washington Carver

Section IV: Dr. Mae Jemison: dancer, medical doctor and astronaut

Section V: The value of an image, of words: perceptions of a people

Section VI: Native Americans, the Code Talkers: chocolate, corn, peanuts and potatoes; then, turkeys, llamas, guinea pigs, and honeybees

Section VII: The power of cognitive resilience

Section VIII:   The psychology of retraining the brain

Section IX: Education

Section X: Conclusion

This block is not open for enrollment yet. Sign up to our email list to get notified as soon as enrollment opens.

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