Collaborative Pedagogy in Medieval Studies: A Scaffolded Workshop Series IV: Content: What Materials Best Advance Our Students' Thinking and Learning about the Middle Ages in New Ways?

Sponsoring Organization(s)

Special Session

Organizer Name

Daniel T. Kline

Organizer Affiliation

Univ. of Alaska-Anchorage

Presider Name

Daniel T. Kline

Paper Title 1

Workshop Leader

Presenter 1 Name

Marjorie Housley

Presenter 1 Affiliation

Univ. of Notre Dame

Paper Title 2

Workshop Leader

Presenter 2 Name

Alex Mueller

Presenter 2 Affiliation

Univ. of Massachusetts-Boston

Start Date

12-5-2019 10:30 AM

Session Location

Schneider 1220

Description

Taking its cue from Dorothy Kim’s call for allies “to do the work” and Jonathan Hsy's call for action, “#MoreVoices: Citation, Inclusion, and Working Together" on In the Middle (13 Jun 2017), and other developments since then, this series of collaborative pedagogical workshops has four related objectives: (1) to develop a set of shared, high-level outcomes that can be adapted to any medieval studies course (at the secondary- or college-level), (2) to map-out a "teaching module" that can be adapted to a variety of medieval studies courses, (3) to incorporate the now-widely-available and circulated collaborative bibliographical materials regarding race, gender, and sexuality in the Global Middle Ages, and (4) to bring together medievalists of all sorts “to do the work" of rethinking our pedagogy collaboratively to incorporate the voices, bodies, texts, perspectives that have been marginalized in traditional medieval studies. Dan Kline

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May 12th, 10:30 AM

Collaborative Pedagogy in Medieval Studies: A Scaffolded Workshop Series IV: Content: What Materials Best Advance Our Students' Thinking and Learning about the Middle Ages in New Ways?

Schneider 1220

Taking its cue from Dorothy Kim’s call for allies “to do the work” and Jonathan Hsy's call for action, “#MoreVoices: Citation, Inclusion, and Working Together" on In the Middle (13 Jun 2017), and other developments since then, this series of collaborative pedagogical workshops has four related objectives: (1) to develop a set of shared, high-level outcomes that can be adapted to any medieval studies course (at the secondary- or college-level), (2) to map-out a "teaching module" that can be adapted to a variety of medieval studies courses, (3) to incorporate the now-widely-available and circulated collaborative bibliographical materials regarding race, gender, and sexuality in the Global Middle Ages, and (4) to bring together medievalists of all sorts “to do the work" of rethinking our pedagogy collaboratively to incorporate the voices, bodies, texts, perspectives that have been marginalized in traditional medieval studies. Dan Kline