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Articles 1 - 30 of 66
Full-Text Articles in Education
Mcgillicuddy Humanities Center Newsletter, September 2023, Clement And Linda Mcgillicuddy Humanities Center
Mcgillicuddy Humanities Center Newsletter, September 2023, Clement And Linda Mcgillicuddy Humanities Center
General University of Maine Publications
McGillicuddy Humanities Center monthly newsletter with updates and news for stakeholders, constituents, partners and supporters.
“It’S Part Of Your Life Now Because Someone Has Exposed You To It”: The Experiences Of Adult Learners Of Color In The Clemente Course In The Humanities, Charity Anderson
“It’S Part Of Your Life Now Because Someone Has Exposed You To It”: The Experiences Of Adult Learners Of Color In The Clemente Course In The Humanities, Charity Anderson
Journal of Research Initiatives
At 30 sites across the United States and Puerto Rico, the Bard College Clemente Course in the Humanities provides economically and socially marginalized adults with a free college course in the humanities. The experience of non-traditional adult students, particularly adults of color, is often missing from academic literature, exacerbating past injustices and increasingly marginalizing the historically underserved people and communities of color by higher education. This paper, which draws from a two-year critical ethnography of Clemente courses, examines the perspective of the adult learners of color who participated in the course. Interview and participant-observational data indicate that adults enrolled in …
Network + Publication + Ecosystem: Curating Digital Pedagogy, Fostering Community, Rebecca Frost Davis, Matthew K. Gold, Katherine D. Harris
Network + Publication + Ecosystem: Curating Digital Pedagogy, Fostering Community, Rebecca Frost Davis, Matthew K. Gold, Katherine D. Harris
Publications and Research
We are excited to share our work on Digital Pedagogy in the Humanities (DPiH), which was published on the Humanities Commons in 2020 by the Modern Language Association after almost a decade of work. DPiH is a large-scale scholarly project that presents the stuff of teaching (syllabi, assignments, and resources) through a curated set of keywords such as “Poetry,” “Disability,” “Queer,” and “Annotation,” among many others. For each keyword, a curator or set of curators has selected and annotated ten pedagogical artifacts; created a curator’s selection statement; and presented …
Educating The Whole Person: Materials From Our Mini Course, Michelle Hayford, Megan Donelson
Educating The Whole Person: Materials From Our Mini Course, Michelle Hayford, Megan Donelson
Pilot Course: Educating the Whole Person
In this document, the instructors provide their own reflections on the course as well as teaching activities and student reflections.
Mcgillicuddy Humanities Center Newsletter, May 2023, Clement And Linda Mcgillicuddy Humanities Center
Mcgillicuddy Humanities Center Newsletter, May 2023, Clement And Linda Mcgillicuddy Humanities Center
General University of Maine Publications
McGillicuddy Humanities Center monthly newsletter with updates and news for stakeholders, constituents, partners and supporters.
Mcgillicuddy Humanities Center Newsletter, April 2023, Clement And Linda Mcgillicuddy Humanities Center
Mcgillicuddy Humanities Center Newsletter, April 2023, Clement And Linda Mcgillicuddy Humanities Center
General University of Maine Publications
McGillicuddy Humanities Center monthly newsletter with updates and news for stakeholders, constituents, partners and supporters.
Mcgillicuddy Humanities Center Newsletter, March 2023, Clement And Linda Mcgillicuddy Humanities Center
Mcgillicuddy Humanities Center Newsletter, March 2023, Clement And Linda Mcgillicuddy Humanities Center
General University of Maine Publications
McGillicuddy Humanities Center monthly newsletter with updates and news for stakeholders, constituents, partners and supporters.
Mcgillicuddy Humanities Center Newsletter, February 2023, Clement And Linda Mcgillicuddy Humanities Center
Mcgillicuddy Humanities Center Newsletter, February 2023, Clement And Linda Mcgillicuddy Humanities Center
General University of Maine Publications
McGillicuddy Humanities Center monthly newsletter with updates and news for stakeholders, constituents, partners and supporters.
Mcgillicuddy Humanities Center Newsletter, December 2022, Clement And Linda Mcgillicuddy Humanities Center
Mcgillicuddy Humanities Center Newsletter, December 2022, Clement And Linda Mcgillicuddy Humanities Center
General University of Maine Publications
McGillicuddy Humanities Center monthly newsletter with updates and news for stakeholders, constituents, partners and supporters.
Mcgillicuddy Humanities Center Newsletter, November 2022, Clement And Linda Mcgillicuddy Humanities Center
Mcgillicuddy Humanities Center Newsletter, November 2022, Clement And Linda Mcgillicuddy Humanities Center
General University of Maine Publications
McGillicuddy Humanities Center monthly newsletter with updates and news for stakeholders, constituents, partners and supporters.
Sense Of Belonging Of Lgbtq+, Racial Minority, And Religiously Affiliated College Students At Binghamton University, Nusrat Islam, Leah Cingranelli
Sense Of Belonging Of Lgbtq+, Racial Minority, And Religiously Affiliated College Students At Binghamton University, Nusrat Islam, Leah Cingranelli
Binghamton University Undergraduate Journal
Binghamton University and institutions alike have put forth certain rules and efforts to ensure that students of the LGBTQ+ community, people of color, and students who are religiously affiliated feel safe. The reality is that many of these students feel unwelcome and ostracized due to their social identities (Blakmon et al., 2020). The aim of this non-experimental study was to investigate if there was a significant difference in sense of belonging among minority groups of undergraduate students who attend Binghamton University, as well as those who are not part of minority groups. We hypothesized that the sense of belonging amongst …
Mcgillicuddy Humanities Center Newsletter, October 2022, Clement And Linda Mcgillicuddy Humanities Center
Mcgillicuddy Humanities Center Newsletter, October 2022, Clement And Linda Mcgillicuddy Humanities Center
General University of Maine Publications
McGillicuddy Humanities Center monthly newsletter with updates and news for stakeholders, constituents, partners and supporters.
Mcgillicuddy Humanities Center Newsletter, October 2022 Correction, Clement And Linda Mcgillicuddy Humanities Center
Mcgillicuddy Humanities Center Newsletter, October 2022 Correction, Clement And Linda Mcgillicuddy Humanities Center
General University of Maine Publications
Gluskabe in the 21st Century: How Newell Lyon’s Stories Carry the Penobscot Language. On Thursday, October 13 at 3:00 pm, Margo Lukens is scheduled to deliver the 2022 Maine Heritage Lecture, titled “Gluskabe in the 21st Century: How Newell Lyon’s Stories Carry the Penobscot Language.” The event will take place in the Bodwell Lounge (third floor) of the Collins Center for the Arts, with a reception to follow in the Hudson Museum (second floor).
Mcgillicuddy Humanities Center Newsletter, September 2022, Clement And Linda Mcgillicuddy Humanities Center
Mcgillicuddy Humanities Center Newsletter, September 2022, Clement And Linda Mcgillicuddy Humanities Center
General University of Maine Publications
McGillicuddy Humanities Center monthly newsletter with updates and news for stakeholders, constituents, partners and supporters.
Social Justice And Racial Equity And Animals, Todd Levasseur
Social Justice And Racial Equity And Animals, Todd Levasseur
Assignment Prompts
No abstract provided.
Translating With The Arts: Seeing Ourselves In The Classroom, Gina Padilla Muriera
Translating With The Arts: Seeing Ourselves In The Classroom, Gina Padilla Muriera
Assignment Prompts
This interactive lecture was designed to be presented weekly on the second meeting pattern day for 3 weeks, so as to transfer and apply various arts discipline strategies taught on the first meeting pattern day. One CA 177 CLO is to design co-equal instructional goals, assessments, and activities that evaluate K-8 student learning through both standards-based artistic processes and non-arts standards. With this objective, I model an arts as emancipatory education framework that empowers students to reflect on personal experiences where injustices were made in their own K-12 grade school journey, and to communicate these injustices through verbal monologue, creative …
Does Co-Speech Gesture Support Children’S Analogical Reasoning? An Investigation Into The Differential Effects Of Gesture On Learning, Amy Michelle Wilkinson
Does Co-Speech Gesture Support Children’S Analogical Reasoning? An Investigation Into The Differential Effects Of Gesture On Learning, Amy Michelle Wilkinson
Dissertations
A well-established conceptualization of academic capitalism is rooted in the marriage of economic theory and critical social. Significantly, academic capitalism links economic dimensions with the political-ideological transformations of U.S. society associated with the fall of communism and the rise of neoliberalism. Academic capitalism is based on a recognition of the paradoxical nature of higher education and offers a lens through which to examine the ways in which institutions in the United States have come to prioritize learning for the labor market as a private good within the new global economy, while also becoming less beholden to the notion of learning …
Leveraging Interdisciplinary Expertise In Developing An Alternative Mathematics Pathway, Beverly Wood, Debra T. Bourdeau
Leveraging Interdisciplinary Expertise In Developing An Alternative Mathematics Pathway, Beverly Wood, Debra T. Bourdeau
Journal of Mathematics and Science: Collaborative Explorations
How many instructors does it take for amazing course design? Or perhaps we should begin with “A mathematician, humanist, communication expert and statistician walk into a bar.” This unlikely team has co-developed a pair of courses, Learning to Reason I: Art and Quotient and Learning to Reason II: Commerce and Flux, that deeply investigate quantitative reasoning from multiple perspectives. Blending elements of rhetoric, logic, and history with mathematical computation, representation, and application breaks through the perceived barriers between the unyielding, obstinate world of mathematics and the ambiguous, equivocal world of the humanities. Developing the courses as an interdisciplinary team of …
World In Strife – Returning To The Humanities, Clive Barstow, Jill Felicity Durey
World In Strife – Returning To The Humanities, Clive Barstow, Jill Felicity Durey
Research outputs 2022 to 2026
The background of this article relates to a long, ongoing attenuation of the Humanities within universities. The problem is the continuing sidelining of the Humanities in university teaching and research funding. If this attenuation and sidelining continue, the world will be a much more cruel and dangerous place, as there will be no moral or ethical check on scientific and technological developments from a humanitarian perspective. This article discusses some of the fears, hopes and criticisms of the Humanities expressed by scholars around the globe, from western democracies including Australia, as well as from middle-eastern and eastern autocracies. The article …
Review Of In Defense Of Loose Translations: An Indian Life In An Academic World By Elizabeth Cook-Lynn, Kerri J. Malloy
Review Of In Defense Of Loose Translations: An Indian Life In An Academic World By Elizabeth Cook-Lynn, Kerri J. Malloy
Faculty Research, Scholarly, and Creative Activity
No abstract provided.
Ouachita Students Honored For Their Work Published In "Assayers 30", Mackenzie Hall
Ouachita Students Honored For Their Work Published In "Assayers 30", Mackenzie Hall
Press Releases
Three Ouachita Baptist University students received awards for their nonfiction work featured in “Assayers 30,” the annual publication by Ouachita’s Department of Language and Literature.
The top three winners from this year's publication are Cora Saddler, a senior English and Spanish double major from Cabot, Ark.; Sydney Motl, a sophomore English major from Arkadelphia, Ark.; and Sabaoot Esho, a junior graphic design and psychology double major from Erbil, Iraq. Their work was chosen by a panel of faculty members led by Dr. Doug Sonheim, professor of English and holder of the Clarence and Bennie Sue Anthony Chair of Bible and …
Pandemic Pandemonium Speech Assignment, Cynthia Rostankowski
Pandemic Pandemonium Speech Assignment, Cynthia Rostankowski
All Assignment Prompts
No abstract provided.
Exploring The Impact Of Field-Based Supervision Practices In Teaching For Social Justice, Detra Price-Dennis, Erica Colmenares
Exploring The Impact Of Field-Based Supervision Practices In Teaching For Social Justice, Detra Price-Dennis, Erica Colmenares
Faculty Research, Scholarly, and Creative Activity
The purpose of this study is to understand how field-based supervisory practices support preservice teachers’ conceptualizations of reflective practice, curriculum inquiry, and social justice-oriented pedagogies. Moving away from the more traditional supervisory triad model (e.g., preservice student--cooperating teacher--university supervisor), our qualitative investigation examined five supervisory practices: formal observation, Lesson Study, video debriefs/observations, guided observations, and participation in Intellectual Learning Communities (ILCs). Through a case study of two preservice teachers, this study highlights how these supervisory practices helped support preservice teachers’ notions of reflective practice and curriculum inquiry but did not deepen their notions of social justice and inclusivity.
Affective (An)Archive As Method, Erica Eva Colmenares, Jenna Kamrass Morvay
Affective (An)Archive As Method, Erica Eva Colmenares, Jenna Kamrass Morvay
Faculty Research, Scholarly, and Creative Activity
The purpose of this article is to explore affective (an)archives in educational research. Unlike archives, which act more like a repository, the (an)archive is a technique for research-creation; it is a process-making engine that triggers new, creative events. The affective (an)archives studied in this paper encompass the affective intensities that arise for teacher-activists participating in public political activism, as well as the affects that animate the moments of emotional crisis (or “stuck moments”) of student teachers in a social justice-oriented teacher education program. We ruminate on the possibilities, intensities, conversations, and materialities that our (an)archives might open. Specifically, we wonder …
Law School News: Remembering Rwu Laws Founding Dean 9-10-2019, Roger Williams University School Of Law
Law School News: Remembering Rwu Laws Founding Dean 9-10-2019, Roger Williams University School Of Law
Life of the Law School (1993- )
No abstract provided.
Politics, Inclusion, And Social Practice, Ronjaunee Chatterjee, Amy Wong
Politics, Inclusion, And Social Practice, Ronjaunee Chatterjee, Amy Wong
Amy Wong
"In the wake of the American election, Elaine Hadley’s 'Closing Remarks' from v21’s b2o issue—that we are writing, living, and teaching in a 'critical moment, some might even say a survivalist moment' in which 'the power of positive psychology does not seem adequate to the times'—appear chilling in their urgency. Hadley cautions against a pleasure and optimism largely disengaged from feminist and class critiques, as well as from what she calls 'Politics with a big P.'"
~article excerpt~
The Doctoral Dissertation: Observations, Perspectives, Protean Nature?, Jean-Pierre Herubel
The Doctoral Dissertation: Observations, Perspectives, Protean Nature?, Jean-Pierre Herubel
2019 Symposium on Electronic Theses and Dissertations
Dissertations represent different doctoral cultures as well as artifacts of research achievement. Beyond general contours identifiable as contribution to knowledge, the dissertation is as much symbol as acculturation within disciplinary cultures. Each dissertation represents training, discovery, unique contribution, as well as the acculturative properties inherent to the dissertation’s liminal process and raison d'être. This exploratory presentation challenges us to consider what the dissertation is and how it may vary in purpose and form.
Closing keynote address at the Symposium on Electronic Theses and Dissertations (ETD) at Purdue University on May 23, 2019.
Academic Prioritization Or Killing The Liberal Arts?, Reshmi Dutt-Ballerstadt
Academic Prioritization Or Killing The Liberal Arts?, Reshmi Dutt-Ballerstadt
Faculty Publications
Dr. Reshmi Dutt-Ballerstadt, professor of English at Linfield College, laments the downsizing of liberal arts and humanities programs and departments by college administrators bent on promoting more "job-oriented" disciplines.
This essay originally appeared as part of Conditionally Accepted, a career advice blog for Inside Higher Ed providing news, information, personal stories, and resources for scholars who are, at best, conditionally accepted in academe. Conditionally Accepted is an anti-racist, pro-feminist, pro-queer, anti-transphobic, anti-fatphobic, anti-ableist, anti-ageist, anti-classist, and anti-xenophobic online community.
What Is Humanistic Stem And Why Do We Need It?, Debra T. Bourdeau, Beverly L. Wood
What Is Humanistic Stem And Why Do We Need It?, Debra T. Bourdeau, Beverly L. Wood
Publications
Getting students who are planning on technical careers to value their general education courses, particularly in the humanities, is not an easy task. The experiences of two professors from disciplines that cross the so-called divide between STEM and Humanities motivate not only a series of courses blending the two to the advantage of their own students but also a virtual pedagogical community to support efforts taking place elsewhere.
The Cost And Value Of Your Education, T. Perry Hildreth
The Cost And Value Of Your Education, T. Perry Hildreth
Journal of Counseling and Psychology
This brief address explores the issue of the dominance of the economical way of valuing education over a more traditional idea of education as moral formation. An education in a Christian liberal arts university uniquely gives priority to the idea that education should shape the student's moral understanding and consequent actions. The address is an invitation to consider how one, professionally and personally, might serve members of a culture shaped largely by the idea that human meaning and purpose are reducible to economic value as merely producers and consumers.