Thursday, November 13, 2014

MMLA Special Session: Seeking Local Knowledge in the Global City—A Research and Pedagogy Roundtable



Please join us and/or send us your comments and questions about the presentations below.  Our hope is to continue the conversation beyond the session and conference.  We're especially interested in hearing your own attempts to address the local/global tension in your curriculum and pedagogy.
 
Special Session Panel:  Thursday, November 13, 2014-- 4:00-5:30 Southfield 70 
Seeking Local Knowledge in the Global City—A Research and Pedagogy Roundtable

Organizer/Chair:  John A. Staunton (jstaunto@emich.edu) , Associate Professor, English Education and American Literature, Eastern Michigan University; Co-Director for Teacher Research, Eastern Michigan Writing Project

Description and Rationale:  This special session seeks to bring together presentations highlighting the “regions of pedagogical practice” which may emerge when we seek to teach local and regional literature and cultural history in 21st-century classrooms.  In particular, the session seeks to investigate the ways in which inquiry into local histories, discourses, practices, and textual artifacts may help to build grounded sites for teaching and learning, both inside and outside traditional educational spaces.  Presentations for the session will represent a range of both pedagogical and curricular practices—ranging from the community and knowledge-building practices of 21st century cross-cultural advocacy to the recovery of alternate, forgotten, or ‘disappeared’ histories and texts that can remap and sustain contemporary discourses of gender, race, and class in the post-industrial Midwest.  Each will explore in its way the diverse teaching/learning situations and diverse historical and literary content/contexts that will offer case studies of a ‘locally-embedded pedagogy,’ which is simultaneously engaged with larger questions of teaching and learning in a global age.   

Participants:

1)      Robin Lucy (rlucy@emich.edu), Associate Professor of African American Literature, Eastern Michigan University.

“Intentional Communities and Pedagogical Practice”
As an African Americanist, I am increasingly interested in locating moments of inter-racial and class solidarity in my scholarship and teaching.  In examining an intentional community, inter-racial housing project built at Willow Run (site of the plant responsible for constructing the B-24 bomber) during World War II -- a period of heightened racial tension and violence in Michigan cities and industrial workplaces -- I will explore the implications of the history of this site for both my pedagogy and theory of African American writing of the era. 

2)      Charles Cunningham (ccunnin2@emich.edu), Associate Professor of English. 
“Teaching Literature in Context:  Southeast Michigan”  

In 2011, a group of interdisciplinary university faculty participated in a seminar to reflect on our positions as college educators in southeast Michigan, trying to ground our teaching and service within the context of the large, public comprehensive university to the specificity of a place and its history.   I will discuss my contribution to the seminar, which was to examine the possibilities and challenges, especially in light of the material and textual resources informing that situated history, for that grounding in the literature classroom.

3)      Lori Burlingame (lburlinga@emich.edu),  Associate Professor of English, Eastern Michigan University. 

“Deconstructing Native American Mascots: A Local History

     This paper explores the history of the struggle to end the use of Native American mascots and logos at educational institutions in Southeastern Michigan, with particular emphasis on the work of the Native American Student Organization, for which I am the faculty adviser, at Eastern Michigan University.  Although there is still some controversy surrounding this issue, in 1991, Eastern Michigan University changed its mascot from the Hurons to the Eagles at the request of the Native American Student Organization.  This local history will be grounded in a more global or national discussion of the reasons for Native communities' objections to the use of Native American logos and mascots in sports and the impact that such appropriations have on Native peoples.  Finally, this paper will touch briefly on the intersections between the mascot issue and the Native American literature classroom through references to the works of Spokane/Coeur d'Alene writer Sherman Alexie, who employs biting humor to provide powerful social critiques of stereotypical representations of Native peoples, including sports mascots.  Discussion of this issue in the classroom can help to facilitate greater cross-cultural understanding and more positive cross-cultural relationships.

4)      John A. Staunton (jstaunto@emich.edu), Associate Professor English, Eastern Michigan University

“Teaching/Learning Local Literature in a Global Age”
The presentation shares the results of what happened when a group of SE Michigan teachers pursued a curriculum and inquiry into teaching local literature with their students.  The historical and contemporary literature by and about people from Michigan is especially suited to this inquiry.  Richly diverse in its genres and subject matter—from the early frontier fictions of the “Old North West,” to the exurban tales of the out-sourced and unemployed, to the religious, ethnic, and cultural divisions (and fusions) amid the decaying metropolises—the literature of Michigan offers students and teachers a way to consider both 1) the interconnections of local/regionalist literary texts, literary performances, and their classroom practice and 2) the tensions and contacts between local practices (whether literary, performative, or pedagogical) and more ‘global’ discourses (of the literary, the aesthetic, or teaching/learning) which seek to frame, assess, or circumscribe those practices.   

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Transmediating the Survey for Teacher Candidates--an Invitation for #NCTE13

Instead of simply reporting for participants what happened in my classes when students engaged in transmediations, I want to invite #NCTE13 participants to share some of their own.

Ideally, students and I would have the shared experience of having read a full text, but for the sake of demonstration I will invite you to read and respond to the following short excerpt from Whitman's "By Blue Ontario's Shore"(1856):



Are you he who would assume a place to teach or be
                                a poet here in the States?
The place is august, the terms obdurate.
Walt Whitman, “By Blue Ontario’s Shore” (1856)



1) Consider what this question and observation mean for you in your own teaching context.  What might they mean for your students?

2) Share that understanding in the comments by uploading a text, image, or short clip of music.


NCTE 2013: Re-Inventing the Literature Survey for English/Education -- Friday 9:30-10:45

Session Code: A.13
Title: Re-Inventing the Literature Survey for English/Education
Level: Secondary, College, Teacher Education
Topic of Interest: Literature
Add to Planner:  Add Item to Planner
Description: Will examine the prospects for English Education and Literature Pedagogy at the secondary and post-secondary levels that emerge at the convergence of secondary English teacher candidates, the British/American Literature Surveys, and the new Common Core Standards for English/Language Arts.
Participant(s): 
  • Chair: John Staunton Eastern Michigan University, Ypsilanti -
  • Speaker: James Lang director of the Center for Teaching and Learning, Worcester, Massachusetts - Turning Points in Teaching/Learning the Survey
  • Speaker: Andrew Smyth Southern Connecticut State University, New Haven - Teacher Candidates in the Shakespeare Course
  • Speaker: John Staunton Eastern Michigan University, Ypsilanti - Transmediating the Survey for Teacher Candidates
  • Speaker: Chris Walsh Boston University, Massachusetts - The Blank Syllabus
Location: Sheraton, Sheraton/Constitution Ballroom B, Second Floor
Time: Friday 11/22 9:30 AM - 10:45 AM

Sunday, July 21, 2013

Forging/Mastering Pedagogies of Teaching Art and Literature

Monday 7/22 begins two weeks of intensive work with EMU grad students and teacher candidates.  Special thanks to Live Creature and apprentice-extraordinaire Jack Staunton for setting up the work space in Pray Harrold with me.

  Below is a found art arrangement he created in 2010

Check back for updates and artwork from the grown ups in the course and an ongoing Image Audit of our inquiries together.


Friday, July 12, 2013

CEE13 Teachers and Students as Co-Conspirators


"Teachers and  Students as Co-Conspirators:  Reading Dangerously and Dangerous Reading"
The presentation on Saturday 2:15-3:15 in ENGR E203 will examine the place of talk, text(s), and ethics in the literature classroom, and features case studies of university and high school English classroom teachers incorporating “dangerous reading”—challenged/banned literature—and “reading dangerously”—practices of teaching/learning which resist comfortable and traditional interpretive stances.

The presentation will offer a hybrid inquiry approach—part research presentation, part hands-on demonstration—of what happens when teachers and students read and talk about banned/challenged/controversial literature.  Drawing upon the pedagogical methods and curricular materials of several classroom English teachers who attempted to teach/read dangerously as they incorporated ‘controversial’ literature in their classrooms, the presentation will seek to move the critical discussion of teaching controversial literature beyond the often binary considerations of censorship and free speech to engage the perspective of ethical criticism and social justice in literature classroom.  Part of our context was a series of recent book challenges within several SE Michigan districts of classic and YA texts, but also of the expressive and interpretive writing produced by secondary students in response to these literary texts as well as the difficult material conditions of their own lives.  The “dangerous reading” of the title encompasses both student and literary texts about controversial topics.
The practices of “reading dangerously” will be showcased through key excerpts of the classroom conversations about this literature: first, of conversations between teacher and students in a secondary classroom about select passages from frequently challenged YA text; and then, of the critical discussion of classroom teachers about the issues raised by those conversations.  This double framing of such conversations will help highlight the real and perceived challenges (and opportunities) teachers experience in fostering new classroom spaces where teachers and students are not silenced or do not fall prey to self-censorship. 
Participants will have an opportunity to examine data through multiple critical lenses and use some techniques of discourse analysis (Gee 2004) to locate additional points of contact between dangerous reading and reading dangerously.