“The Stories We Tell Ourselves Shape Our Identities”

IF 0.6 Q3 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Kathe Jervis
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The author—in the role of one teacher observing another—documented a spring 2021 remote introductory art history course during the COVID-19 pandemic when graduate student teaching assistants called a campus-wide strike. Forced to improvise, the professor replaced formal analysis papers and exams with an ungraded journal. Drawing from the content of these journals, notes from the Zoom classes, and email correspondence with the professor, the author explicates how students took this journal assignment as an invitation to respond personally to the course content, and as an opportunity to grapple with their own identities. These journals allowed students to use art to explore similarities and differences freely across culture, space, and time. With the traditional requirement for an academic argument temporarily on pause, the author raises questions that characterize our present day: how to encourage a world that accepts different identities without hostility.
“我们告诉自己的故事塑造了我们的身份”
在新冠肺炎大流行期间,当研究生助教呼吁校园罢工时,作者扮演一名教师观察另一名教师的角色,编写了2021年春季远程入门艺术历史课程。这位教授被迫即兴发挥,用一本未分级的日记代替了正式的分析论文和考试。根据这些期刊的内容、Zoom课程的笔记以及与教授的电子邮件通信,作者阐述了学生们是如何将这份期刊作业视为对课程内容做出个人回应的邀请,以及如何将其视为一个与自己身份作斗争的机会。这些期刊使学生能够利用艺术自由地探索文化、空间和时间之间的异同。随着学术争论的传统要求暂时停止,作者提出了当今社会的特点问题:如何鼓励一个接受不同身份而没有敌意的世界。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Schools-Studies in Education
Schools-Studies in Education EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
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