The Stick Jar: One Tool – Many Uses

By Sina Rautman

Imag­ine the fol­low­ing sit­u­a­tion: You want your stu­dents to read out their results, but you are run­ning low on time. Your stu­dents are high­ly moti­vat­ed, and most of them want to share their work with the class, but it is clear from the start that you can’t involve all of them. What do you do now? Pick your ‘favorite’ child? Pick the child who did the best job as an excel­lent exam­ple to the rest of the class? Or would it be bet­ter to involve the shy child and give her a chance to con­tribute to the class? Will some chil­dren feel neglect­ed or preferred?

JarLast sum­mer, I spent three months in the Unit­ed States where I’d been offered a chance to observe dif­fer­ent ele­men­tary school class­es. There I found a solu­tion to the prob­lem men­tioned above. In one class – full of high­ly moti­vat­ed fourth graders – I noticed a beau­ti­ful­ly dec­o­rat­ed jar filled with tongue depres­sors. At first, I could­n’t think of any pur­pose for this glass, so I decid­ed to ask the teacher about it after class.

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Storytelling: Of Geniuses and Maps

By Kai-Arne Zimny

What makes a piece of fic­tion suc­cess­ful, apart from a good por­tion of luck? Well, some writ­ers deem the craft of ‘plot­ting’ essen­tial for cre­at­ing fic­tion that goes some­where, while oth­ers pre­fer to write from the seat of their pants and are like­ly to dread the prospect of their art being any­thing less than inspi­ra­tion, tal­ent, and vision.

Let me intro­duce you to two writ­ing guides that might offer some per­spec­tive on the ini­tial ques­tion. First, let’s vis­it some­one who claims that both ‘pantsers’ and plot­ters are on the wrong track because …

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ISSN for the American Studies Blog

Dear Read­ers and Con­trib­u­tors, 

Before the new year rolls around, the edi­tors of the Amer­i­can Stud­ies Blog are hap­py to announce that the ASB now has an ISSN! The Nation­al ISSN Cen­ter of Ger­many (part of the Deutsche Nation­al­bib­lio­thek in Frankfurt/Main) has award­ed us the ISSN 2702–7767. 

This might be espe­cial­ly impor­tant for our many con­trib­u­tors who can now list their blog posts as (aca­d­e­m­ic) pub­li­ca­tions.  

 

Togeth­er with the entire ASB team, we wish you a won­der­ful and healthy New Year!  

Sab­ri­na and Maria 

 

A Holiday Survival Guide

By Henrike Kattoll

The hol­i­day sea­son is a unique time. We go through the full spec­trum of emo­tions with­in a span of two weeks only. We con­stant­ly have to deal with fam­i­ly mem­bers and guests; we eat way too much while telling our­selves we’ll be going on a diet next year; and we tend to get over­ly emo­tion­al, espe­cial­ly on Christ­mas and New Year’s Eve.

Since it’s such a won­der­ful­ly stress­ful time, I chose three top­ics to help you through the last few weeks of the year.

 

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A Project Seminar in Times of Covid-19

By Maria Moss

Project sem­i­nars are always chal­leng­ing. Since they involve more work than a tra­di­tion­al sem­i­nar, they often attract those types of stu­dents who enjoy a good chal­lenge and want to cre­ate some­thing last­ing. Dur­ing the sum­mer semes­ter 2020, it was no dif­fer­ent. Well, at least dur­ing the plan­ning phase. But then Covid-19 hit. With­in three weeks, we had to trans­form our sem­i­nar to remote learn­ing. There was much to learn, and the eco­crit­i­cal project I had envi­sioned took a major detour into the unknown. Orig­i­nal­ly, I had planned – as I had done in past semes­ters – to have stu­dents cre­ate dif­fer­ent projects on cam­pus or in and around Lüneb­urg, for exam­ple gueril­la gar­den­ing or var­i­ous instal­la­tions (for which we often need­ed the university’s per­mis­sion). How­ev­er, dur­ing a lock down in which we were only sup­posed to leave our homes to go to work, the doc­tor, or the super­mar­ket, I quick­ly knew that tried-and-true recipes for a suc­cess­ful project sem­i­nar would not work. So what could we do?

Well, it wasn’t long after explain­ing the predica­ment to my stu­dents that they came up with an idea. And a great idea it was.

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