Welcome to part 3! In this episode, our heroes answer questions about creativity in teaching and working with students. In case you missed it, here's Part 1, here's Part 2. 7. In what ways do you get to be creative in your work?
"My work is interdisciplinary
and combines traditional archaeology, ethnohistory, and engineering. Devising recipes which successfully blend data from these disciplines
is always a creative endeavor. My students and I research the
design and uses of prehistoric and early historic technologies, particularly
those constructed from biological tissues like bone and antler." (Amy Margaris '96)
"I
can't think of many ways in which teaching and research are NOT
creative. Devising new ways to present the subject matter of a course
so that it is most clear to students requires great creativity.
Designing a research experiment is a very creative process. Giving
students good advice requires creativity. Coming up with good
examination questions is a creative process. Writing memos, reports,
research documents, and other such things is a creative process."
(Bruce Richards '61)
"All ways. Teaching, research,
civic engagement, the room for creativity here is endless. My students
and I have created the Campus Resource Monitoring System and this last
year we won a national award for developing the 'Energy Orb' - it was
rated best energy efficiency appliance of the year. In 2004 a group of
students who worked with me founded Lucid Design Group which has now
developed resource use monitoring and display systems for schools all
over the country. The opportunity for creatively engaging with Oberlin
students and the larger community are nearly endless. We are creating
models in Oberlin that we hope others will follow." (John Petersen '88)
"Research
is my primary creative outlet. Identifying important issues,coming up
with ways to address them, and interpreting findings are all creative
acts. What I do day to day is superficially quite different from what
my artist wife does, but at a deeper level, we are both constantly
seeking new ideas and trying to find out what, in reality, works."
(Bill Friedman '72)
"Because I work both with college
students and with children in grades K-12, I have a most challenging
but also a most exciting job, one in which theory and practice are
forever intertwined, with the one informing the other incessantly. At
all times the job requires me to be creative, imaginative, and
flexible. There's never a second where I can actually get settled in,
comfortable with things." (Booker Peek '66)
"To
communicate effectively requires various skills, but it also requires
creativity in seeking ways to express complex ideas. Thus, for me
creativity is a key component of teaching and research, from
interactive engagement with students to seeking new ways to analyze
visual culture. Most recently, I just wrote an essay about a graphic
narrative, Palestine, by Joe Sacco. My research has mostly focused on
news photography, and so I enjoyed this move into a new genre." (Wendy
Kozol '80)
"Designing a course is always a creative
activity, as is working on creating a program such as Cinema Studies
or working on the curriculum in the English department. And I always
find teaching an exercise in imagination." (William Patrick Day '71)
"I get to write books and to be around smart people all the time, whether students or colleagues." (Leonard Smith '80)
8. What was your latest collaboration with a student?
"A
large part of my work is continually interacting and collaborating with
students, often on an individual basis." (Booker Peek '66)
"I
encourage my research students to work on independent projects, and
they choose a wide range of topics, from music perception to moral
judgments. In addition, many students have worked as my research
assistant over the years, on projects related to the experience of time
in infants, children and adults. Many of my research assistants and
independent research students have gone on to graduate school and
distinguished careers in developmental psychology." (Bill Friedman '72)
"This semester my two fabulous research assistants, Sunjana Supekar and
Kat Lamp, are gearing up to perform timed tool replication studies to
better understand the relationships between raw material properties
and labor investments in tool production. The results are important
for understanding technological changes that occurred in colonial contexts,
including in late 18th century Native Alaskan communities
following Russian incursions spurred by the fur trade. Oberlin
students and I also recently finished production on an 11 minute video
on antler harpoon production called Antler Craft, which can be
viewed at http://new.oberlin.edu/arts-and-sciences/departments/anthropology/faculty_detail.dot?id=20975." (Amy Margaris '96)
"My
closest collaborations with students have been with physics students
that I supervised in the honors program. The last year I taught
(2007-08) I worked fairly closely with Patrick Landreman on a study of
an acoustical feature of Finney Chapel." (Bruce Richards '61)
"History
is usually a solitary enterprise, and does not lend itself to
collaboration with students in ways that are common in, say, the
natural sciences. However, I did take a certain satisfaction this year
in helping one of my honors students get into the Ph.D. program at
Stanford University. They accepted exactly ONE student in Modern
European History this year, and it was my student. It was a
well-deserved honor, and I am extremely proud of him." (Leonard Smith
'80)
"This last Winter Term I worked with a
student developing the readings and curriculum for a course on
television I plan to offer in 2010-11." (William Patrick Day '71)
"In 2005, I received a Mellon grant that included a stipend
for a student assistant. Rebecca DeCola '05 and I published a paper in
2006 titled 'Remapping the Visual War on Terrorism: Citizenship and Its
Transnational Others.' The article looks at news photographs of the
Afghan and Iraqi women in the context of Bush administration's claims
about the war on terror." (Wendy Kozol '80)
Thanks for coming, gee it's getting late... Sure, you can stick around for a while. I have some Michael McDonald records we could listen to. Oh no? Well, we should do this again sometime. Um, yeah...
Big thanks to Wendy Kozol, Booker Peek, John Petersen, William Patrick Day, Amy Margaris, Leonard Smith, Bill Friedman, and Bruce Richards.
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