Foreword: Microcosms of Hope: Foreword; H.Jones
Introduction: Faculty Collaboration and Transformative Pedagogical
Practice; T.Sieber, E.Kingston-Mann & A.Dallalfar
The Institutional Context of Innovation and Change
Academic integrity and Academic Inclusion: The Mission of the
'Outsider Within'; E.Kingston-Mann
A History Lived and Lessons Learned: Collaboration, Change, and
Teaching Transformation; T.Sieber
Pedagogy for the Professoriate: The Personal Meets the Political;
D.Patmon
PART I: FACULTY IDENTITY AS A RESOURCE FOR EFFECTIVE TEACHING
Imaging the Spaces between Art and Inclusive Pedagogy; V.Poey
Inexplicable Desire, Pedagogical Compulsion: Teaching the
Literatures of the Middle East; R.Srikanth
Teaching Women's Lives: Feminist Pedagogy and the Sociological
Imagination; A.Dallalfar
Teaching Art History at an Art School: Making Sense from the
Margin; S.K.Sanyal
PART II: ENGAGING STUDENTS IN LEARNING
The Whole Person in Front of Me: Toward a Pedagogy of Empathy and
Compassion; R.A.Robinson
Teaching Ethics Through Multicultural Lenses; J.Lucas
Hearing Students' Silence: Issues of Identity, Performance, and
Recognition in College Classrooms; C.Panofsky & L.Bogad
Exploring and Exploding the Boundaries of Inclusive Teaching:
Social Class Confronts Race and Gender; P.Brown
Building Agency through Writing; M.Jones
Words Matter: Vocabulary in a Diverse Pre-college-level Writing
Class; R.Pepp
"This book manages to weave together the personal experiences of dedicated educators with some astute political analysis of the larger forces that shape those experiences. It has been more than a half-century since C. Wright Mills issued a famous call for research that 'converts personal troubles into social issues.' We have here a collection of highly individualized encounters - both failures and successes - with the tendency of the university to resist change. What unites these accounts is a common theme that gives the reader an ever-sharpening picture of the fissures, pathways, and possible nodes that can lead to change." - Troy Duster, Professor of Sociology and Bioethics, New York University "The authors in this remarkable book speak about themselves, their students, their institutional contexts with unusual moral, political, and cultural self-awareness and boundary-crossing interpretive acuteness. Their papers interweave not only a multi-vocal but also a coherent and immediately useful conversation about teaching in richly diverse classrooms. Telling vivid stories, drawing on experience as well as research and acute socioeconomic as well as educational analyses, they offer on-the-ground lessons for other teacher/researchers who really do care about and take responsibility for the lives - including those of professors - that are indeed changed in classrooms." - Elizabeth K. Minnich, author of Transforming Knowledge (2nd Edition), and Senior Scholar, Association of American Colleges & Universities, Office of Diversity, Equity and Global Initiatives "Within these chapters, the reader will find stories of hope, empowerment, fulfillment, and validation. Increasingly diverse students and faculty populate our colleges and universities. Together, they are finding ways to change teaching and learning practices that honor and respect their strengths, talents, and passions. They are challenging traditional academic epistemology and exploring new ways of knowing. Together, through research and learning, students become knowledge producers instead of knowledge consumers, with the civic corollary that their education prepares them to be participants in a wider culture of democracy instead of being spectators to it. Through the practice of collaborative and inclusive knowledge generation and discovery in classrooms and communities, deeper, pervasive change is happening on campuses, changing institutional cultures. These are stories about that change. They are about a hopeful future for higher education." - John Saltmarsh, Director of the New England Resource Center for Higher Education, the University of Massachusetts Boston
Arlene Dallalfar is Associate Professor of Anthropology and Gender
Studies at Lesley University, USA.
Esther Kingston-Mann is Professor of History and Roy J. Zuckerberg
Chair at the University of Massachusetts, Boston, USA.
R. Timothy Sieber is Professor of Anthropology at the University of
Massachusetts, Boston, USA.
"This book manages to weave together the personal experiences of
dedicated educators with some astute political analysis of the
larger forces that shape those experiences. It has been more
than a half-century since C. Wright Mills issued a famous call for
research that 'converts personal troubles into social issues.' We
have here a collection of highly individualized encounters - both
failures and successes - with the tendency of the university to
resist change. What unites these accounts is a common theme
that gives the reader an ever-sharpening picture of the fissures,
pathways, and possible nodes that can lead to change." - Troy
Duster, Professor of Sociology and Bioethics, New York
University
"The authors in this remarkable book speak about themselves, their
students, their institutional contexts with unusual moral,
political, and cultural self-awareness and boundary-crossing
interpretive acuteness. Their papers interweave not only a
multi-vocal but also a coherent and immediately useful conversation
about teaching in richly diverse classrooms. Telling vivid stories,
drawing on experience as well as research and acute socioeconomic
as well as educational analyses, they offer on-the-ground lessons
for other teacher/researchers who really do care about and take
responsibility for the lives - including those of professors - that
are indeed changed in classrooms." - Elizabeth K. Minnich, author
of Transforming Knowledge (2nd Edition), and Senior Scholar,
Association of American Colleges & Universities, Office of
Diversity, Equity and Global Initiatives
"Within these chapters, the reader will find stories of hope,
empowerment, fulfillment, and validation. Increasingly diverse
students and faculty populate our colleges and universities.
Together, they are finding ways to change teaching and learning
practices that honor and respect their strengths, talents, and
passions. They are challenging traditionalacademic epistemology and
exploring new ways of knowing. Together, through research and
learning, students become knowledge producers instead of knowledge
consumers, with the civic corollary that their education prepares
them to be participants in a wider culture of democracy instead of
being spectators to it. Through the practice of collaborative and
inclusive knowledge generation and discovery in classrooms and
communities, deeper, pervasive change is happening on campuses,
changing institutional cultures. These are stories about that
change. They are about a hopeful future for higher education." -
John Saltmarsh, Director of the New England Resource Center for
Higher Education, the University of Massachusetts Boston
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