We are honored to announce the 2025 CUNY Adjunct Incubator Awardees. The projects represented here reflect just some of the creative, critical, and community-engaged work that is happening right now at CUNY. And this year, we have an unprecedented number of faculty awardees from our community colleges, showcasing the immense work across our 2-year, 4-year, and graduate schools. Faculty will embark on their projects in the summer of 2025, and we look forward to hearing more about their progress later next year.
Since 2019, the Gittell Collective and the Center for the Humanities at CUNY Graduate Center have honored the scholarly and creative work of our university’s adjunct faculty through the CUNY Adjunct Incubator. Now under the auspices of Public Scholarship Practice Space (PS2), the initiative continues to support and highlight the significant, critical and community-engaged scholarship and pedagogy work of adjuncts teaching across CUNY. Meet our 2025 Awardees and learn about their grant-funded projects and scholarship:
Tusia Dabrowska
Design, Queens College; Film, John Jay College
Tusia Dabrowska is a Polish American artist who works at the intersection of storytelling, performance and media. Tusia teaches courses in Design at Queens College and in Film and Videography at John Jay College.
“As a 2025 CUNY Adjunct Incubator awardee, I will continue to investigate the symbolic and political meaning of the newly erected border in the Białowieża forest. My research will focus on the refugee experience. This work will build toward a three channel, immersive iteration of ‘I No Longer Believe We Are Good People.'”
Seth Fein
Film, LaGuardia Community College
Seth Fein is a historian and filmmaker. He operates Seven Local Film, which he founded in Jackson Heights, Queens, where he lives. He teaches Film at LaGuardia Community College.
“My video essay will connect the lives and careers of Isamu Noguchi (1904-1988) and Joseph Cornell (1903-1972) across the borough in which they both lived and worked. Working between archival research and original footage, expository and participatory narration, ‘Noguchi and Cornell through Queens’ engages the past and present of place to consider each of these seminal-yet-outlier artists differently by contemplating their ‘outerborough’ worlds together.”
Naziat Hassan
Queensborough Community College
Naziat Hassan is a licensed mental health counselor at Queensborough Community College, with expertise in treating individuals, adolescents, adults, and families facing mood disorders, trauma, and substance abuse.
“As a 2025 CUNY Adjunct Incubator awardee, I will uplift underrepresented communities by raising awareness around mental health and well-being through culturally sensitive education, advocacy, and community outreach. By highlighting the unique challenges these populations face, I aim to create spaces for open dialogue, reduce stigma, and promote access to resources that support mental and emotional health.”
Diana Higuera-Cortés
Languages and Literatures, Lehman College
Diana Higuera-Cortes is a PhD student in the Latin American, Iberian, and Latino Cultures (LAILaC) program at the Graduate Center-CUNY. A former CUNY Humanities Alliance fellow, Diana teaches Spanish at Lehman College.
“As a 2025 CUNY Adjunct Incubator awardee, I will develop La Loteria Niuyorkina: A pedagogical game/toolkit to explore Spanish varieties though the Linguistic Landscape of New York City. The project will engage students from Lehman College and Queens College in the study of the public spaces they navigate everyday as well as an exploration of common Spanglish words and expressions that shape their identity.”
Alex Ho and Joy Liu
Department of Ethnic and Race Studies, Borough of Manhattan Community College (BMCC)
Joy Liu is a Therapist/ Clinical Social Worker. A former Museum educator, Joy now teaches in the Department of Ethnic and Race Studies at Borough of Manhattan Community College (BMCC).
Alex Ho is an ethnic studies and media arts educator with ten years of education experience and a film and media Alex teaches in the Department of Ethnic and Race Studies at Borough of Manhattan Community College (BMCC).
“As a 2025 CUNY Adjunct Incubator awardees, we will collaborate and explore family histories and cultural identities through a collaborative autoethnographic process of dialogue, artmaking, and oral history collection.”
Alice Kallman
Mina Rees Library, CUNY Graduate Center
Alice Kallman is an adjunct reference librarian in the Dissertation Office at the Mina Rees Library at CUNY Graduate Center. Over the course of studies, she worked at the New York Public Library, and then with an oral history project at the Queens Public Library. Alice also works part time at the Queens Public Library in the Correctional Outreach department doing reentry programming for individuals returning home from incarceration.
“As a 2025 CUNY Adjunct Incubator awardee, I will continue developing my ongoing project to document Syrian culinary superstitions. This will take the form of further interviews with Syrians in the diaspora – increasing my scope of research from just Syrian Jews to Syrians of all religions. I will also work on my website/digital archive that aims to hold the linkages within collected stories. Finally, I will use this funding to create a physical experience to display my findings, something between an exhibition, family meal, and immersive audio experience as guided by the research process.”
Jerald Isseks
Guttman Community College
Jerald Isseks is a critical educational scholar, an organizer and a writer who teaches in the First-Year Experience program at Guttman Community College.
“As a 2025 CUNY Adjunct Incubator awardee, I will continue developing a participatory research program for first-year students at Guttman Community College. Specifically, this will involve organizing a regular end-of-semester event where student researchers can present their work to the academic community, eliciting interest and support for action campaigns they’ve conceived to confront local and institutional issues of injustice.”
Hannah Weiss
Urban Planning and Policy, Hunter College
Hannah Weiss is an adjunct lecturer in Urban Planning and Policy at Hunter College.
“As a 2025 CUNY Adjunct Incubator awardee, I will collaborate with people who have navigated eviction and nonprofit attorneys striving to fulfill the promise of Right to Counsel (RTC). Through case studies and narrative, I hope to highlight the human element that is lost when data dominates eviction discourse, and light a fire under leaders to fund RTC and re-imagine housing court.”
Natalie Willens
LaGuardia Community College
Natalie Willens is an educator, artist, organizer, and Ph.D. candidate in Urban Education at the CUNY Graduate Center. They have published poetry, essays, and photography on the intersections of art and activism, and are working on a multi-year project with LaGuardia Community College students to creatively archive underfunded LGBTQ+ spaces in New York City.
“As a 2025 CUNY Adjunct Incubator awardee, I will work with students and community organizers to produce a public exhibition of our photographs and oral histories that highlight the essential work of underfunded LGBTQ+ spaces in New York City. The exhibition will have three main goals: To highlight the powerful collaborative work of CUNY students/faculty and community organizers, to respond to the ever-increasing erasure of LGBTQ+ spaces that serve the most marginalized members of the LGBTQ+ community, and to secure sustainable funding for the organizations that cultivate these life-saving spaces.”
Desislava Zagorcheva
LaGuardia Community College
Dessie Zagorcheva is an author and educator with a Ph.D. in International Relations from Columbia University. She teaches courses in Global Politics and American Government and Politics at CUNY. Her research focuses on global challenges to democracy. She is passionate about using her expertise to educate and inspire students to engage more actively in politics.
“As a 2025 CUNY Adjunct Incubator awardee, I will develop my project on enhancing Media Literacy Skills. This is a multidisciplinary project which has three main objectives first, to highlight the importance of media literacy and the challenges faced by educators in this field; second, to compile and make widely available best practices in media literacy instruction from various public colleges; and third, to create a comprehensive repository of resources for students, teachers, and librarians. By fostering media literacy and critical thinking we aim to cultivate a generation of well-informed citizens who can make sound decisions for themselves and their communities.”
The CUNY Adjunct Incubator is co-sponsored by PS2 at the Center for the Humanities through generous grants from the Sylvia Klatzkin Steinig Fund and the Gittell Urban Studies Collective at the Graduate Center, CUNY.