Serendip is an independent site partnering with faculty at multiple colleges and universities around the world. Happy exploring!
Reply to comment
Classroom Ecologies
A bird sanctuary, |
If the liberal arts behaved more like ecology, and less like our human In such a context, what new shapes might our teaching and learning take, In Class/Out Classed: On the Uses of a Liberal Education In the middle ages, European monastic communities preserved learningthat the Catholic Church forbade; in the 18th century, U.S. slaves could only learn to read in secret. We experience liberal arts colleges as occupying a similar position today: endangered themselves by wide-spread valuing of the technical-and-vertical, attended by students who are read either as privileged outsiders, or as scapegoats prey to predatory fiscal policies and scoffing from “the real world.” Women in Walled Communities: Silence, Voice, Vision We tell a different story, one that identifies the liberal arts as a |
We explore a pedagogical orientation that is both ecological and sustainable, in the very largest sense of these terms: engaging teachers and students in re-thinking classroom practices, and our larger lives, as complex, enmeshed, volatile, ever-expanding eco-systems. Our project has a porous, interactive energy, inviting reader-participants into pedagogical spaces where they might attend to the shifting borderlands between what we’re more familiar with and what feels edgy, new--with the goal of transfiguring what spaces of teaching and learning are and can be-and-do. We weave through our own voices--stories, images and propositions--those of students and colleagues with whom we have taught, learned, co-presented and co-written. This is a genre-crossing project, a dialogue working across verbal and visual forms, telling some good stories, inviting others in response, demonstrating the complex playfulness of collaborative and transdisciplinary forms of teaching and learning, and incorporating concrete suggestions about how academic and other structures might work to open this up.
Transition and Location: On Leaving Home, In Search of a Place of Understanding
We explore classrooms as testing grounds, paradoxically boxed-in spaces that cannot keep their promise to enclose, categorize, or name, and thus can become productive of conditions ripe for breaking through to experiences of reality, to the piercing that is possible in the intensity and instability of border ecologies.