Teaching Transformations 2009: Contributions from the Annual Conferences of the ?New England Center for Inclusive Teaching (NECIT) and the ?Center for the Improvement of Teaching (CIT) at UMass Boston

Teaching Transformations 2009: Contributions from the Annual Conferences of the ?New England Center for Inclusive Teaching (NECIT) and the ?Center for the Improvement of Teaching (CIT) at UMass Boston

Teaching Transformations 2009: Contributions from the Annual Conferences of the ?New England Center for Inclusive Teaching (NECIT) and the ?Center for the Improvement of Teaching (CIT) at UMass Boston

Teaching Transformations 2009: Contributions from the Annual Conferences of the ?New England Center for Inclusive Teaching (NECIT) and the ?Center for the Improvement of Teaching (CIT) at UMass Boston

Paperback(Human Architecture: Journal of the Sociology of Self-Knowledge, VII, 1, Winter 2009 ed.)

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Overview

This Winter 2009 (VII, 1) issue of Human Architecture: Journal of the Sociology of Self- Knowledge, entitled "Teaching Transformations 2009" and dedicated to the chronicling of representative experiences of teaching transformation in the New England area and elsewhere, brings together selected proceedings of the annual conferences of the Center for the Improvement of Teaching (CIT) and the New England Center for Inclusive Teaching (NECIT) recently held at UMass Boston. The first seven studies in the issue were gathered through the conference activities of NECIT. The second series of articles emerged from the conversations and presentations at the annual CIT conference at UMass Boston. The contributions have a common interest in advancing teaching and learning practices that transform the self and the world in favor of more just, inclusive, and participatory outcomes. The editors believe that the most central and distinguishing defining features of NECIT and CIT, i.e., the three-fold concerns with promoting pedagogical reflexivity, student learning empathy, and faculty agency, are well advocated for and respresented in the papers shared in this volume. Contributors include: Jay R. Dee (also as journal issue guest editor), Vivian Zamel (also as journal issue guest editor), Cheryl J. Daly, Maria Natalicia Rocha-Tracy, Darlene Ferguson-Russell, John Fobanjong, Patricia White, LeeAnn Griggs, Sally Barney, Janet Brown-Sederberg, Elizabeth Collins, Susan Keith, Lisa Iannacci, Kimberly Smirles, Ann Wetherilt, Melanie Murphy, Elijah Patterson, Janet D. Johnson, Elizabeth H. Rowell, Mary Ball Howkins, Duane Wright, Wayne-Daniel Berard, Alexandria Hallam, Anne Geiwitz, Matthew R. Kerzner, Angelika Festa, and Mohammad Tamdgidi (also as journal editor-in-chief). Human Architecture: Journal of the Sociology of Self-Knowledge is a publication of OKCIR: The Omar Khayyam Center for Integrative Research in Utopia, Mysticism, and Science (Utopystics). For more information about OKCIR and other issues in its journal's Edited Collection as well as Monograph and Translation series visit OKCIR's homepage.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781888024326
Publisher: Ahead Publishing House (imprint: Okcir Press)
Publication date: 11/10/2015
Edition description: Human Architecture: Journal of the Sociology of Self-Knowledge, VII, 1, Winter 2009 ed.
Pages: 148
Product dimensions: 7.00(w) x 10.00(h) x 0.32(d)

Table of Contents

vii—Editors’ Note: NECIT, CIT, and Teaching Transformations 2009
Jay R. Dee, Vivian Zamel, and Mohammad Tamdgidi, UMass Boston

From the New England Center for Inclusive Teaching (NECIT)

1—Innovative Models for Organizing Faculty Development Programs:
Pedagogical Reflexivity, Student Learning Empathy, and Faculty Agency
Jay R. Dee, University of Massachusetts Boston; and Cheryl J. Daly, Western Carolina University

23—Encounters between Immigrant Students and U.S. Urban Universities
Maria Natalicia Rocha-Tracy, Boston University

35—From Juicy to Rooftop and Other Lines in Between: Teaching Remedial Reading to First Year College Students
Darlene Ferguson-Russell, William Paterson University

49—Beyond the Single Classroom: The Paired Dimension in Inclusive Teaching
John Fobanjong and Patricia White, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth

55—Varying Pedagogy to Address Student Multiple Intelligences
LeeAnn Griggs, Sally Barney, Janet Brown-Sederberg, Elizabeth Collins, Susan Keith and Lisa Iannacci, Massasoit Community College

61—Transgender Realities: Student Lives and Community Challenges
Kimberly Smirles, Ann Wetherilt, Melanie Murphy and Elijah Patterson, Emmanuel College

75—Teacher Candidates’ Critical Conversations: The Online Forum as an Alternative Pedagogical Space
Janet D. Johnson, Rhode Island College

From the Center for the Improvement of Teaching (CIT)

87—Promoting Dialogue on the Transgender Experience in College Courses through Films and Literature
Elizabeth H. Rowell, Rhode Island College

93—Teaching Cultural Competence in Print Advertising: Postmodern Ads and Multi-Race Clothing Models
Mary Ball Howkins, Rhode Island College

99—The Latino Immigrant Labor Experience as Depicted in Film
Duane Wright, University of Massachusetts Boston

105—Meditation as Teaching and Learning Tool: Theory, Practice, and Testimony
Wayne-Daniel Berard, Alexandria Hallam, Anne Geiwitz, Matthew R. Kerzner, Nichols College

115—Teaching Critical Thinking to Freshman Writers by Engaging Contemporary Artists’ Work
Angelika Festa, Massachusetts College of Art and Design
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