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APPLY NOW: “Mapping the Futures of Higher Education” with Professors Cathy Davidson and Bill Kelly

Mapping the Futures of Higher Education  IDS 70200

Professors Cathy N. Davidson and William Kelly

Spring 2015  Tuesday 4:15-6:15 PM

4 or 3 credits (depending on the crosslisting department)

Crosslisted: Art History, Comparative Literature, Critical Social/Personality Psychology, Earth and Environmental Sciences & Environmental Psychology Programs, English, Urban Education

Enrollment by Permission of the Instructors

Permission form:  Please submit by November 21, 2014  http://goo.gl/forms/uc5e9TSOcP

 

Course Description and RationaleThe course is designed for second, third, or fourth year graduate students who are teaching during S 2015 at one of CUNY’s colleges or community colleges.  Like the larger Futures Initiative, this course looks in two directions at once.  First, it examines and then puts into practice a range of new peer-driven innovative pedagogies across disciplines that will serve graduate students who are committed to exploring a range of new teaching skills and objectives.  The assumption here is that most of the methods, assessment tools, and the general apparatus of higher education were developed in the Industrial Age (roughly 1865-1925) and it is imperative that we design new cross-disciplinary methods and structures to rethink education for the new arrangements and informal learning styles of the Internet Age.  Second, “Mapping the Futures of Higher Education” focuses on the role and requirements of public education in the U.S. in a stressed time where, nationally, we have seen several decades of defunding public education, leading both to a student debt crisis and a professorial crisis of adjunct or contingent labor practices.  What are the costs of public education? Who bears them? What are the collective investments society makes in public education and what are the rewards?
In this course, we will design collaborative online tools, including a number of public ones, to include the students taught at the CUNY colleges in a semester-long inquiry and practicum into better ways of thinking, knowing, creating, and transforming institutional structures, both across fields and within them.  One collective project we will develop in this course is a public, online “CUNY Map of New York” to represent the goals and the collective contribution of public higher education in a democracy.  We’ll focus on public engagement and presentation of work; visual, digital, and data literacies; quantitative, qualitative, and performative thinking; translation of specialized doctoral research for a generalist audience (of peers, students, and the public); new forms of qualitative and quantitative assessment across all fields and levels; and analysis of the importance of access, diversity, quality, and equality for higher education and the collective good in a democratic society.
All of this will be driven by a student-designed syllabus that embodies the course’s core peer-learning collaborative methods.

Admission by Permission of the Instructor:  Only 12-15 students maximum will be admitted in this first course offering.  The goal is to have as diverse a cohort as possible, with students coming from as many crosslisting departments as possible and also teaching at the widest possible range of CUNY colleges or community colleges during the Spring 2015 semester.  To that end, students interested in taking the course will need to complete a simple survey with this information.

 

Students seeking admission should apply online by November 21, 2014.

Please contact Ms. Lauren Melendez (lmelendez@gc.cuny.edu), Administrative Specialist for the Futures Initiative, if you have any additional questions.

Students will be notified that they have been admitted to the course by December 10, 2014.

Students not admitted to the course will be invited to take part in a non-credit series of public peer-learning workshops hosted by the course participants.

 

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