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HTLab: Teaching in Partnership

Our thirtieth and final Humanities Teaching Lab

Location

Online

Date & Time

April 28, 2023, 10:00 am11:15 am

Description

In our thirtieth and final Humanities Teaching Lab through the Inclusion Imperative Program, we will reflect on what it means to teach in partnership–its possibilities, challenges, and futures.

UMBC Professors Keegan Finberg (English), Tania Lizarazo (Modern Languages, Linguistics, and Intercultural Communication) and Elaine MacDougall (English, Writing Center) will share their experiences teaching transformed and community-engaged courses through the HTLabs Course Transformation Grant Program. In 2021, Dr. Lizarazo taught, “Global Stories,” a course dedicated to community-engaged digital storytelling. Dr. Finberg transformed her introductory American literature course into “Baltimore Poetry and Politics,” a class immersed in the places and poets of Charm City. Elaine McDougall partnered with Baltimore City College High School Teacher Lena Tashjian on “Telling Our (Counter) Stories,” a collaborative writing course between UMBC and this Baltimore City high school.




Please join us for this vibrant conversation about transforming our teaching in the Humanities!

In this virtual HTLab, participants will:

  • Identify ways they might transform their courses in the long, near and short terms
  • Practice applying new pedagogical techniques shared by the panelists
  • Consider the challenges of teaching in partnership and how to address them
  • Share knowledge of inclusive pedagogy and community-based practices gleaned from the last six years of Humanities Teaching Labs
Registration is required to attend this HTLab. Please register by Wednesday, April 26.

Questions? Contact Viridiana Colosio-Martinez, Inclusion Imperative Associate: vcolosi1@umbc.edu. If you are unable to attend, but would like to access a recording of the workshop, please contact Viridiana Colosio-Martinez.

Speaker bios:

Keegan Cook Finberg is Assistant Professor of English and affiliate faculty in the departments of Gender, Women’s, + Sexuality Studies and Language, Literacy & Culture at UMBC. She researches across several disciplines including poetry and poetics, critical theory, feminist studies, modern and contemporary art, media, and performance. She is currently at work on a book project which traces the expansion of the category of poetry in relation to the privatization of the U.S. welfare state in the second half of the twentieth century.


Tania Lizarazo is an Associate Professor contributing to the Global Studies Program, the Spanish Area, and the MA in Intercultural Communication. She is Affiliate Faculty of Gender, Women’s + Sexuality Studies, and Language, Literacy & Culture. Her research interests include digital storytelling, Latin American cultural studies, transnational feminisms and performance studies. Her recent digital storytelling projects are a collaboration with the Gender Committee of a farmers’ organization from the Colombian Pacific: mujerespacificas.org and a collaboration with members of farm working communities in California’s Central Valley: sexualidadescampesinas.ucdavis.edu.


Elaine MacDougall is a Lecturer in the English department and Director of the Writing Center at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County (UMBC). She is currently a doctoral student in the Language, Literacy, and Culture program at UMBC with research interests in higher education in prison, mindfulness and writing studies, embodiment pedagogy, tutor and student self-efficacy and advocacy, and anit-racist pedagogy in the writing center and writing classroom using frameworks from critical race theory and feminist theory, especially Black feminism. Additionally, her background as a yoga instructor has influenced her practices in the writing classroom and made her more aware of the importance of being present with and listening to her students.