Zoë A. Meletis, Annie Booth, Laura Pyke, Ashley Seniunas
{"title":"Outside of the box: Inspiring Women Among Us (IWAU) as public pedagogy on gender and inclusion via learning in community","authors":"Zoë A. Meletis, Annie Booth, Laura Pyke, Ashley Seniunas","doi":"10.1080/02660830.2023.2249599","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"AbstractDecember 6th marks the Montreal Massacre, and Canada’s National Day of Remembrance and Action on Violence Against Women. Universities often host actions around this date. In 2015, we sought to expand discussions on gender and equity by launching Inspiring Women Among Us or IWAU (www.iwau.ca). Our annual series of events includes talks, workshops, films, arts activities, movement, mentoring opportunities, and activism/actions. We build community through engaging with issues across the gender spectrum. Educational exchanges are key to IWAU but we do not label them as such. We work to showcase and support feminist, queer, and Indigenous individuals and organisations. Our events are low barrier, and we purposefully emphasise an informal atmosphere. We have responsively moved queerness, trans awareness, intersectionality, and learning from Indigenous leaders to our core. In this paper, we present research about participant experiences (2017) as collected via a self-administered survey (n=140). In discussing response patterns, key themes, and our interpretations, we consider IWAU as site of formal and informal educational exchanges. In design and practice, we stress inclusive opportunities outside of the classroom. According to participants, education and mentoring is occurring, formally and informally, as hoped. We share quotes about participant experiences of IWAU to illustrate how they experience exchanges and learning. Cognisant of work by Porter (2019) and others, we acknowledge the need for mutually-beneficial university-community relations. We discuss IWAU’s unique position/role as a bridge between university, community, scholarship and action. In contextualising results and interpretations, we foreground the persistent need for gender-related spaces, opportunities, and exchanges beyond formal learning scenarios, in a ‘knowledge democracy’. Adding to over 50 years of work (for recent examples, see Ahmed, Berdahl et al., Cheeks, Corbett, Moeke-Pickering et al.), we offer our case study as including elements that support adult education ‘outside of the box,’ for feminist futures.Keywords: Feminismeducationpublic pedagogymentoringcommunity-university collaborationsintersectionality AcknowledgementThe authors thank all IWAU participants since 2015, and particularly those who contributed to this 2017 research. We couldn’t keep enjoying and refining IWAU without our Student Planning Assistants and volunteers, our organizing committee and all of our champions, donors, and participants. This includes UNBC Chancellor and Lheidli T’enneh Elder Darlene McIntosh, a key supporter from the start. We thank funders and partners over the years, including the University of Northern British Columbia, and the City of Prince George. We also thank Two Rivers Gallery, the Prince George Public Library and the Geoffrey R. Weller Library at UNBC, the College of New Caledonia, the Northern Women’s Centre, Gender Outlines, the Jim Pattison Broadcasting Group, the Makerie, the House of Ancestors, the Omineca Centre for the Arts, DEGREES Coffee, Copy Services at UNBC, and many more. We thank the UNBC Office of Research and Innovation, and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada for funding this work and contributing funding to IWAU events. We thank our family members, friends, and colleagues for supporting our service, reporting, and research efforts linked to IWAU.Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1 In addition to citing written academic sources, we are including these short videos as they fit with our attempts to incorporate various media into our practice, and to connect folks with accessible information.2 Participant quotes are presented using unique identifiers that include the event their survey was collected at, and a number.3 The Mentoring Lunch was created by two UNBC professors, Drs. Blanca Schorcht (then Dean, College of Arts, Humanities, and Health Sciences and Heather Smith (then Director, Centre for Teaching and Learning) who explicitly wanted to offer an event where mentoring, carried out by both peer and self, would occur in a safe atmosphere. Offered since 2015, this event continues to be one of IWAU’s most popular activities. For more on IWAU events, please see www.iwau.ca.4 This reference was suggested to us as we discussed this paper in progress and the challenges within it to an IWAU organizer. She knew exactly what we were talking about, and suggested this excellent and appropriate article. Thank you, Dr. Smith!Additional informationFundingThis work was supported by 2 UNBC Undergraduate Research Experience Awards (URE; 10.13039/1000008785); the City of Prince George; and funding from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC) (10.13039/501100000155).","PeriodicalId":42210,"journal":{"name":"Studies in the Education of Adults-NIACE","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":1.2000,"publicationDate":"2023-09-15","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Studies in the Education of Adults-NIACE","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/02660830.2023.2249599","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
AbstractDecember 6th marks the Montreal Massacre, and Canada’s National Day of Remembrance and Action on Violence Against Women. Universities often host actions around this date. In 2015, we sought to expand discussions on gender and equity by launching Inspiring Women Among Us or IWAU (www.iwau.ca). Our annual series of events includes talks, workshops, films, arts activities, movement, mentoring opportunities, and activism/actions. We build community through engaging with issues across the gender spectrum. Educational exchanges are key to IWAU but we do not label them as such. We work to showcase and support feminist, queer, and Indigenous individuals and organisations. Our events are low barrier, and we purposefully emphasise an informal atmosphere. We have responsively moved queerness, trans awareness, intersectionality, and learning from Indigenous leaders to our core. In this paper, we present research about participant experiences (2017) as collected via a self-administered survey (n=140). In discussing response patterns, key themes, and our interpretations, we consider IWAU as site of formal and informal educational exchanges. In design and practice, we stress inclusive opportunities outside of the classroom. According to participants, education and mentoring is occurring, formally and informally, as hoped. We share quotes about participant experiences of IWAU to illustrate how they experience exchanges and learning. Cognisant of work by Porter (2019) and others, we acknowledge the need for mutually-beneficial university-community relations. We discuss IWAU’s unique position/role as a bridge between university, community, scholarship and action. In contextualising results and interpretations, we foreground the persistent need for gender-related spaces, opportunities, and exchanges beyond formal learning scenarios, in a ‘knowledge democracy’. Adding to over 50 years of work (for recent examples, see Ahmed, Berdahl et al., Cheeks, Corbett, Moeke-Pickering et al.), we offer our case study as including elements that support adult education ‘outside of the box,’ for feminist futures.Keywords: Feminismeducationpublic pedagogymentoringcommunity-university collaborationsintersectionality AcknowledgementThe authors thank all IWAU participants since 2015, and particularly those who contributed to this 2017 research. We couldn’t keep enjoying and refining IWAU without our Student Planning Assistants and volunteers, our organizing committee and all of our champions, donors, and participants. This includes UNBC Chancellor and Lheidli T’enneh Elder Darlene McIntosh, a key supporter from the start. We thank funders and partners over the years, including the University of Northern British Columbia, and the City of Prince George. We also thank Two Rivers Gallery, the Prince George Public Library and the Geoffrey R. Weller Library at UNBC, the College of New Caledonia, the Northern Women’s Centre, Gender Outlines, the Jim Pattison Broadcasting Group, the Makerie, the House of Ancestors, the Omineca Centre for the Arts, DEGREES Coffee, Copy Services at UNBC, and many more. We thank the UNBC Office of Research and Innovation, and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada for funding this work and contributing funding to IWAU events. We thank our family members, friends, and colleagues for supporting our service, reporting, and research efforts linked to IWAU.Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1 In addition to citing written academic sources, we are including these short videos as they fit with our attempts to incorporate various media into our practice, and to connect folks with accessible information.2 Participant quotes are presented using unique identifiers that include the event their survey was collected at, and a number.3 The Mentoring Lunch was created by two UNBC professors, Drs. Blanca Schorcht (then Dean, College of Arts, Humanities, and Health Sciences and Heather Smith (then Director, Centre for Teaching and Learning) who explicitly wanted to offer an event where mentoring, carried out by both peer and self, would occur in a safe atmosphere. Offered since 2015, this event continues to be one of IWAU’s most popular activities. For more on IWAU events, please see www.iwau.ca.4 This reference was suggested to us as we discussed this paper in progress and the challenges within it to an IWAU organizer. She knew exactly what we were talking about, and suggested this excellent and appropriate article. Thank you, Dr. Smith!Additional informationFundingThis work was supported by 2 UNBC Undergraduate Research Experience Awards (URE; 10.13039/1000008785); the City of Prince George; and funding from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC) (10.13039/501100000155).
摘要12月6日是蒙特利尔大屠杀纪念日,也是加拿大全国反暴力日。大学通常会在这一天举办活动。2015年,我们发起了“女性与我们同行”(Inspiring Women Among Us,简称IWAU)活动(www.iwau.ca),旨在扩大关于性别与平等的讨论。我们的年度系列活动包括讲座、研讨会、电影、艺术活动、运动、指导机会和行动主义/行动。我们通过参与跨性别问题来建立社区。教育交流是IWAU的关键,但我们并没有给它们贴上这样的标签。我们致力于展示和支持女权主义者、酷儿和土著个人和组织。我们的活动是低门槛的,我们有意强调一种非正式的氛围。我们响应性地将酷儿、跨性别意识、交叉性和向土著领袖学习纳入我们的核心。在本文中,我们介绍了通过自我管理调查(n=140)收集的参与者体验(2017)的研究。在讨论回应模式、关键主题和我们的解释时,我们将IWAU视为正式和非正式教育交流的场所。在设计和实践中,我们强调课堂外的包容性机会。根据参与者的说法,教育和指导正在正式和非正式地进行,正如所希望的那样。我们分享了IWAU参与者的经历,说明他们是如何交流和学习的。认识到波特(2019)和其他人的工作,我们承认需要建立互利的大学-社区关系。我们讨论了IWAU作为大学,社区,学术和行动之间桥梁的独特地位/作用。在情境化的结果和解释中,我们强调了在“知识民主”中,在正式的学习场景之外,对与性别相关的空间、机会和交流的持续需求。加上50多年的工作(最近的例子,见Ahmed, Berdahl等人,奇克斯,科比特,Moeke-Pickering等人),我们提供了我们的案例研究,包括支持成人教育“打破常规”的元素,为女权主义的未来。作者感谢2015年以来IWAU的所有参与者,特别是那些为2017年的研究做出贡献的人。没有我们的学生策划助理和志愿者,没有我们的组委会,没有我们所有的支持者、捐赠者和参与者,我们无法继续享受和完善IWAU。这包括UNBC校长和Lheidli 'enneh长老Darlene McIntosh,从一开始就是一个关键的支持者。我们感谢多年来的资助者和合作伙伴,包括北英属哥伦比亚大学和乔治王子城。我们还要感谢北卡罗来纳大学的两河画廊、乔治王子公共图书馆和杰弗里·r·韦勒图书馆、新喀里多尼亚学院、北方妇女中心、性别概述、吉姆·帕蒂森广播集团、马克里、祖先之家、奥米内卡艺术中心、学位咖啡、北卡罗来纳大学的复印服务等等。我们感谢UNBC研究与创新办公室和加拿大社会科学与人文研究理事会为这项工作提供资金,并为IWAU活动提供资金。我们感谢我们的家人、朋友和同事对我们与IWAU相关的服务、报告和研究工作的支持。披露声明作者未报告潜在的利益冲突。注1除了引用书面学术资料外,我们还包括这些短视频,因为它们符合我们将各种媒体纳入我们实践的尝试,并将人们与可获取的信息联系起来参与者的报价使用唯一标识符表示,其中包括收集调查的事件和数字导师午餐是由两位教授创建的。布兰卡·肖特(当时的艺术、人文和健康科学学院院长)和希瑟·史密斯(当时的教学和学习中心主任)明确希望提供一个活动,在一个安全的氛围中,由同伴和自我进行指导。自2015年以来,该活动一直是IWAU最受欢迎的活动之一。有关IWAU活动的更多信息,请参阅www.iwau.ca.4当我们讨论本文的进展以及其中对IWAU组织者的挑战时,该参考文献被建议给我们。她完全明白我们在说什么,并推荐了这篇优秀而合适的文章。谢谢你,史密斯博士!本研究得到了2项UNBC本科生研究经验奖(URE;10.13039 / 1000008785);乔治王子城;加拿大社会科学与人文科学研究理事会(SSHRC)资助(10.13039/501100000155)。