Hiking in the Anthropocene

By Michaela Keck

Cobalt Lake | Pho­to cred­it: Michaela Keck

This past fall, my trav­els and work oblig­a­tions had me fly into Cal­gary. I took the oppor­tu­ni­ty to spend five addi­tion­al days in spots I con­sid­er breath­tak­ing­ly beau­ti­ful: Water­ton and Glac­i­er Nation­al Park. I crossed over the Cana­di­an bor­der and into Mon­tana on a late after­noon in Sep­tem­ber and drove past herds of bison toward the vil­lage of St. Mary just as the last rays of the sun broke through the clouds and lit up the moun­tain ranges that rise so abrupt­ly from the grassy plains.

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Literature Circles Rock!

By Sabrina Völz and Jennifer Kühl

Image cred­it: Tim Geers

As we all know, more and more adults are read­ing less and less in their free time. That’s not a judg­ment, just a fact. Bud­ding book­worms might even be con­sid­ered an endan­gered species, so a few years ago, I start­ed look­ing for a dif­fer­ent approach to teach­ing lit­er­a­ture to stu­dents of all majors and back­grounds. While look­ing for inspi­ra­tion, I came across the lit­er­a­ture cir­cle, an approach that might just engage even the most skep­ti­cal uni­ver­si­ty stu­dent who’d rather be writ­ing code for an app or start­ing his or her own busi­ness. While it has become an inte­gral part of the Eng­lish class­room from ele­men­tary school upwards in the Unit­ed States, this stu­dent-cen­tered activ­i­ty is rel­a­tive­ly unknown in Ger­many. At least it was to me. Dur­ing my research, I found out that lit­er­a­ture cir­cles come in all shapes and sizes and can be struc­tured in many dif­fer­ent ways, so there’s no one “right” way of doing it. That very fact appealed to me and led me to explore unchar­tered territory.

In a nut­shell, a lit­er­a­ture cir­cle is made up of a small group of indi­vid­u­als who read the same text. Togeth­er they explore the text’s con­tent and style while reflect­ing, ask­ing ques­tions, and shar­ing feel­ings, just as any lit­er­a­ture cir­cle would do. Sounds sim­ple, right? It is and that’s exact­ly the point. When I first start­ed adapt­ing the lit­er­a­ture cir­cle to fit my university’s cur­ricu­lum, I didn’t real­ize how this method would rev­o­lu­tion­ize my class­room – at least for a day.

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A New National Holiday – A Riddle

By Maria Moss

By all rights, I should be a nation­al hol­i­day in the Unit­ed States.

I am not as polit­i­cal­ly incor­rect as Colum­bus Day which Native Amer­i­cans are not real­ly crazy about (who can blame them?);

I’m not as solemn as Vet­er­ans Day, which is more a day of remem­brance for those who served in the wars than a day of celebration;

I’m not as gen­er­al as Pres­i­dents’ Day that was orig­i­nal­ly sup­posed to only com­mem­o­rate George Washington’s birth­day but now has become the gener­ic hol­i­day for all U.S. presidents;

and I’m cer­tain­ly not as cru­el to the unsus­pect­ing turkey as Thanks­giv­ing Day is (although the tons of food that are con­sumed on my spe­cial day are cer­tain­ly not veg­e­tar­i­an either).

Despite all of these dis­cour­ag­ing facts, I feel hope­ful since the peo­ple who like and endorse me will soon be in the major­i­ty – at least in Cal­i­for­nia. And we all know what hap­pens once it has hap­pened in Cal­i­for­nia, right?

Curi­ous? Read more.

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School Ties

By Kai-Arne Zimny

Pho­to cred­it: Daderot (Own work) [Pub­lic domain], via Wiki­me­dia Commons
It’s 1955. David Greene (Bren­dan Fras­er), a Jew­ish boy from a work­ing class fam­i­ly, leaves his home, the indus­tri­al city of Scran­ton, Penn­syl­va­nia, to go to a pres­ti­gious New Eng­land prep board­ing school for his senior year. His tick­et in? A foot­ball schol­ar­ship since David is an out­stand­ing quar­ter­back! “Don’t tell peo­ple any more than they need to know,” the school team’s foot­ball coach advis­es David upon arrival, hint­ing at the social gap between David’s future school­mates and blue-col­lar peo­ple like David and himself.

How­ev­er, David is nei­ther able nor will­ing to hide his social back­ground from his school and team­mates, boys from rich fam­i­lies across the board. Despite the dif­fer­ences, he is able to bond with them and even become pop­u­lar quick­ly. How­ev­er, just as quick­ly he is con­front­ed with the sad truth that there’s yet anoth­er dif­fer­ence the boys won’t be will­ing to over­look that eas­i­ly – that he’s Jew­ish.  Read more »

Writing Life: From Theory to Practice

By Ines van Rahden and Sabrina Völz

Story­telling is as old as human civ­i­liza­tion itself and ful­fills a human need. In soci­eties, in which edu­ca­tion is becom­ing more com­mod­i­fied, stu­dents do not only want to be rel­e­gat­ed to the posi­tion of con­sumers and regur­gi­tate mem­o­rized facts. They have often told me that they want some con­trol over their stud­ies and the chance to pro­duce mean­ing­ful, cre­ative work. In one of my project-ori­ent­ed sem­i­nar on life writ­ing, stu­dents – includ­ing Ines van Rah­den – got the chance to do just that. You can lis­ten to her sto­ry, “24 Hours behind Bars,” at the end of this blog.

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