The Wicked Festival is an exposition of student problem solving hosted by the College of Humanities and Behavioral Sciences and supported by the Center for Innovative Teaching and Learning (CITL), Citizen Leader, and the Office of Undergraduate Research and Scholarship.
The Wicked Festival was motivated by a CITL book group on Dr. Hanstedt's book Creating Wicked Students: Designing Courses for a Complex World. The book inspired several important tenets of the festival: Students tackle wicked, complex, multi-dimensional public problems. Students find solutions. At the festival, students talk about their work with others, becoming the "authorities." At the Wicked Festival, students have used presentations, posters, audio clips, banned book readings, and videos to start conversations about their problems and solutions.
The Spring 2025 Wicked Festival is April 15, 2025 from 5-7:30 p.m. in the Artis Center
for Adaptive Innovation and Creativity.
Faculty, students, families and prospective Radford students may contact Paige Tan, Ph.D. for more information.
We have found 鈥渨icked鈥 teaching empowers students with the ability to define, research, and solve problems; oral presentation skills; confidence; toleration of ambiguity; collaboration, and understanding failure as part of the process to success.
In addition, in the 2024-2025 school year, we are using a $49,000 grant from the Educating Character Institute at Wake Forest University to imbue wicked problems teaching with important human values: practical wisdom, active hope, empathy, and care.
We hope our wicked problem solvers will be in demand by employers. One of the key identified by the National Association of Colleges and Employers (NACE) is critical thinking. Behaviors associated with critical thinking are, according to NACE: 鈥渟olving problems using sound, inclusive reasoning and judgment.鈥 In addition, the World Economic Forum鈥檚 Future of Jobs Report 2023 found: "Cognitive skills are reported to be growing in importance most quickly, reflecting the increasing importance of complex problem-solving in the workplace." We are preparing Radford students to be robot-proof.
Look for courses in Appalachian Studies, Biology, Citizen Leader, Communications, Criminal Justice, Design, Economics, Education, English, Geography, International Studies, Marketing, Office of Undergraduate Research and Scholarship (OURS), Peace Studies, Philosophy, Political Science, Sociology, Social Work, and Spanish that take part in Wicked.
Fall 2021 - Fall 2024
Individual classes that have participated in the festival in the past include:
The Wicked Festival could not happen without our partners and supporters on campus.