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"How Do I Learn from You All?" Students Negotiating the Risk to Learn via an In-Class Gaming Community

"How do I learn from you all?"

Students Negotiating the Risk to Learn Via an In-Class Gaming Community

Alice Lesnick, Wendy Chen, Thomas Lord, and Alexandra Wolkoff

Blended Learning Conference, Bryn Mawr College, May, 2014

SESSION OVERVIEW

"The possibilities that exist between two people, or among a group of people, are a kind of alchemy. They are the most interesting thing in life."  Adrienne Rich, Arts of the Possible

Sasha De La Cruz's picture

So much alike

I had a hard time starting this reflection because I feel as though my participation/engagement constantly fluctuated throughout the semester, the whole year really, but definitely more this semester. I think that for the most part I took a lot of steps back this semester, in terms of speaking less and listening more; I found myself not wanting to take ‘leadership roles’ as much as I would have any other time. At times I felt as though I wasn’t putting in as much effort or working as hard as I should have, and it really bothers(ed) me because this is my favorite class of the week and is the one thing I look forward to every week. I think I missed about two of the prep-meetings. The weeks I would miss the meetings, I would feel a little lost that Friday. We put so much thought into every activity, not being there to plan for it makes me nervous because I am not sure which “direction” we aimed to take the conversations; because of this, not being 100% prepared did not scare me that much. Overall, this was a very difficult semester for me; between my mother being injured and my friend going to jail (and all of the in-between), I had way too much going on towards the end of the semester and it was hard for me to focus on my life on campus.

 

Student 24's picture

Not Ready for a Ghost Town.

I've not finished thinking about and discussing eco-literacy. I'm not ready to wrap things up, and though these past few weeks I've been almost continuously engaged in conversations about almost everything, in the framing of ecological thinking, conversations which have directly and indirectly been self-evaluative, critical, appreciative, and nostalgic - I cannot at this point in time put it all down on paper. Writing this paper means I've come to a calm enough resting or stopping point, and the truth is I haven't yet. Maybe tomorrow or over the summer or in a few semesters, I can go back and write this, but not today. I can't express how grateful I am to have taken this course, which is why I want to keep taking advantage of the platforms that have been introduced to me and the platforms which I have come across within myself. I still have so much to say and so much I want to hear from people around me.

P.S. I've decided not to change my banner photo from Play in the City last semester. I rather like it and I haven't changed my opinion about what it means to me, so I'm quite satisfied leaving it there. I wrote: "I have no idea what business the name belongs to, but that doesn't matter because I don't know the story anyway. I just know that it's a snapshot of a point in my story." Points and center points. Relationships in the shared spaces between us - that's my eco-literacy theme.

sara.gladwin's picture

Self-Evaluation: A Series of Critical Love Letters

Here is a link to my self-evaluation: /exchange/book/standing-wall/self-evaluation

As always, it has been a pleasure, and I cannot wait to work with you all again!

sara.gladwin's picture

Self-Evaluation

A Series of Critical Love Letters

 

Dear Anne and Jody,

 

Hummingbird's picture

Additional Reading and Resources

I have put together this section because so much external reading informed what I ultimately wrote, and I wanted to share those resources with others. The following resources are broken up into three categories: News Articles, Activist Blogs and Archives, and Books by Academics. All of the quotations from the narratives are included in the relevant resource category.  

 

News Articles

In 2007, following an incident of racial insensitivity and ignorance at Bryn Mawr College and a postering campaign on race at Haverford College, several articles in the Bi-College News discussed the way race is experienced within the Bi-Co:

Heller, J. (2007, May 1). Profs Organize Race Discussion at HC – The Bi-College News. Retrieved May 15, 2014, from http://www.biconews.com/2007/05/01/profs-organize-race-discussion-at-hc/

Milne, A. (2007, April 17). Students Call for SGA Treasurer’s Resignation – The Bi-College News. Retrieved May 15, 2014, from
http://www.biconews.com/2007/04/17/students-call-for-sga-treasurers-resignation/

Vasko, L. (2007, May 11). Social Justice in the Bi-Co – The Bi-College News. Retrieved May 15, 2014, from http://www.biconews.com/2007/05/11/social-justice-in-the-bi-co-3/

Then last year (2012-13) protests and discussion occurred surrounding the closing of Perry House at Bryn Mawr. A letter from several students on the closure was featured in the Bi-College News:

Hummingbird's picture

Narratives

Angelique, November 2013

This has happened so many times. Too many times.[1] Our biggest fear after the incident was that people would stop caring. That people would need another walkout or protest or incident, and another and another to remind them that this is important, that we have to keep having dialogue about race, that this is still a white campus and as a woman of color I’m still marginalized. I’m tired, okay, because it’s not fair. And I want to ask, when is enough?[2] I don’t want to have to keep reminding.

 

Katie, September 2013

Philosophy 101 was one of the bigger intro classes at Mabell. I think on that first day there were about seventy or eighty students in the lecture hall – and I know that sounds small to anyone from a larger school or research university, but for Mabell that was huge. Our biggest lecture hall only sat one hundred students. It might seem weird that so many people wanted to take an introductory philosophy class, but it was huge because it covered two or three different college requirements. Everyone wanted to get those out of the way.

sara.gladwin's picture

a reflection on writing a comic book about writing a paper

This is a reflection on my third English paper for Anne, which took the form of a comic book and was never fully completed. I will be attaching scans of the pieces that had been completed SOON and using this space to outline where the comic will continue to go.

 

I chose to write a comic book for several reasons. The first reason was that I am interested in experimenting with forms of academic work that diverge from conventional assignments, such as essays and exams. In doing so, I hope to challenge the notion that these conventional assignments are the most adequate methods of measuring student growth and learning inside the classroom. By expanding our understanding of what a “paper” looks like, we can better serve the needs and strengths of diverse learning styles.

peacock's picture

final paper

Hummingbird's picture

Guides for Reading

Character List (in order of first appearance)

Angelique: Junior Sociology major. Latina.

Katie: Undeclared First-Year. White.

Samantha: Junior Spanish Major. Black.

Rachel: Sophomore English Major. White.

Jonathon: Tenured History Professor. Black.

Mikayla: Sophomore Anthropology Major. Black.

Andrea: Junior Chemistry Major. White.

Sonya: Senior English Major. Asian American.

Eleanor: Dean of the Undergraduate College. White.

College Admissions Brochure; 2013-14

Mabell College is a small, all-women’s liberal arts institution of 2,000 undergraduates. The college was founded in 1870 to provide an elite academic experience for women at a time when women were denied advanced educational opportunities. Mabell continues to provide a top-quality education for women today. Embedded in our vibrant social life and rigorous academic work are the ideals of developing and supporting critical, passionate, socially active, and aware women. We value our diverse community and the strengths you bring to our school. We look forward to welcoming you!

Timeline

   

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