What Is Sustainable Pedagogy?

Student architectural modelThe Humanities have become a sustainability study in these STEM-driven times for higher education. How does our hive survive the academic climate changes of a shrinking professoriate, curricular compression, and a nomadic job market? How do Humanities workers maneuver within and across our smaller footprints at public institutions? My Spring course took into account these changes. I designed “Modernist Studies & Pedagogy Workshop” for graduate students in our PhD and MFA programs. In choosing materials, I took into account my students’ diverse interests and career paths. These initial findings are preparatory material for a design review.

Sustainable Pedagogy is Resourceful. Materials-driven, my seminar incorporated modernist literary, critical, and visual texts; short essays about teaching; resources from our campus museum and library; teaching and conference materials I’ve made; materials from conference colleagues. I included teaching materials from other graduate students and from colleagues in English, Art History, Architecture, the Harn Museum of Art, and UF Libraries. My students worked with these shared resources, and they shared each other’s work. We practiced a renewable resourcefulness.

Sustainable Pedagogy is Cross-Campus. Partnerships I have formed across campus proved as crucial as my expertise in designing my seminar. The campus became our campus unit. We ventured across three colleges: Liberal Arts & Sciences; Arts; and Design, Construction & Planning. Interdisciplinary work requires physically crossing over to our colleagues in other disciplines and consulting with them. Through conversations we discovered that we were teaching some of the same materials.

Sustainable Pedagogy is Collaborative. Within our seminar room my students workshopped Beta assignments for future students and draft instructional resources for our campus museum. As the seminar emerged through our texts and campus partnerships, we became a pedagogy ensemble. We offered a roundtable presentation on teaching close reading for our department’s graduate organization. We visited an Art History class before we team-taught it. We were team taught by an undergraduate architecture class.

Sustainable Pedagogy is Creative. Much of our seminar work involved making instructional materials, generated from broad keywords that did not constrain our thinking. For example: Write an actual assignment about Cities that you would give your own students in a college-level course (or type) of your choice. Think of your Assignments as prototypes or Beta assignments. The idea is to generate materials that we can workshop, refine, and use. Connect your assignment to at least one primary text on our syllabus. This was the most creative work many students had done in a seminar.

Sustainable Pedagogy is Ethical. All teaching materials were shared by permission within and beyond my seminar. Our cross-campus consulting proceeded by outreach and invitation. Where possible, we offered resources in exchange for those we received. We shared our resources; we made new resources; I offered to visit my colleagues’ future courses. Through such ethical practices, Humanities workers sustain one another.

Sustainable Pedagogy is Beyond-the-Book. I have taught and benefitted from book-oriented seminars. Yet if Humanities departments are now envisioning beyond-the-book dissertations, shouldn’t seminar design take this into account? My seminar did not conform to the standard production line: seminar paper > journal article > dissertation > book. Using modular forms, my seminar assignments were outward-facing toward classrooms, conferences, journals, museums, and the public. Such assignments are resourceful for jobs within and beyond the academic market.

Sustainable Pedagogy is Repurposing. I tell all of my graduate students that everything they write or make in their coursework should have at least one afterlife. My debut pedagogy seminar-workshop practiced repurposing, opening new synergies between our academic writing and our teaching. We can repurpose our student assignments into blog posts, conference papers, publications, and museum guides. We can transpose academic writing into crossover writing. We can transport a module from something we’ve made to something we are now making.

(re)Source
I took this photo in the Architecture Teaching Gallery on Feb. 12. There was no label, so I cannot credit this model’s maker. Resourceful in its available materials (wire, wood, paper), the design offers an inventive prototype. The stained plywood marks the material’s prior states as it supports a new geometric form. A fitting figure for the work of sustainable pedagogy.  –MB

  • I wrote this post at the 2019 Humanities Writing Retreat, sponsored by UF’s Center for the Humanities and the Public Sphere.

 

SHTEM: Humanities Meets Engineering

SHTEMIf you’re a teacher in these times, you hear early and often that STEM is what education is now all about. It’s STEM to the brim–more science, technology, engineering & math–and a requiem for Arts and Humanities. Indeed there are so many calls for “more STEM!” and its efficiencies that Monty Python’s song for more Spam seems downright deficient. But this narrow way of thinking isn’t good for education–including the STEM disciplines.

STEM shouldn’t be about Us vs. Them. Our colleagues in the Arts and Art humanities1Education have countered this thinking head on with their acronym STEAM: adding the Arts to power STEM with creativity. I’m on board with this broad-minded approach to learning. And I’ll add SHTEM to the mix: powering STEM with the historical, cultural, and conceptual thinking of the Humanities. It’s a strategic mode of creative thinking that can power future designers, entrepreneurs, and inventors in the STEM professions. It’s a mode of thinking that draws on aesthetics, rhetoric, gender theory, history, and sociology to show students how to tailor their ideas to particular audiences for specific purposes: whether that audience is a governing board, a manufacturer, or a niche market.

I’m involved in the IMOS initiative here at UF, which brings together faculty in Materials Science Engineering, Anthropology, Classics, English, History, and Sociology in partnership with the Center for the Humanities and the Public Sphere. We’re reinventing freshman education for engineers with our interdisciplinary perspectives and case studies. Engineering students learn the anthropological concept of entanglement, the Classical uses of concrete to create social spaces, the modernist aesthetics of household plastics, the cyborg effects of semiconductors on social relations. And much more! Soon I’ll be joining colleagues from Team IMOS to give a pedagogy workshop for the Materials Research Society meeting in Boston. (We’re funded by MRS and NSF, and had seed money from a UF Creative Campus Catalyst grant.) We’ll show up with plenty of SHTEM, and we look forward to learning from our colleagues in science and engineering.  -MB