On my expectations for myself as I continue to work with our graduating
English majors.
In my education reform post a couple weeks back, I focused mostly on
elementary and secondary education, and on issues and ideals connected to those
earliest and most universal educational experiences. But of course higher
education has its own set of interconnected contemporary crises, including many
related to the same issues (lack of funding and support, narratives of “accountability”
and their impacts on teachers and institutions, critiques of public educators)
I addressed in that post. And in the last few years, as I have begun teaching
our departmental capstone course (a required class for all graduating senior
English majors), I have found myself confronted more overtly by two other,
related challenges facing higher education: the increasingly
uncertain futures facing college graduates, particularly those with
humanities degrees; and the
questions about the meaning and value of such degrees, and of university departments
and programs in the humanities.
Obviously I believe that humanities degrees, and specifically English ones,
are incredibly valuable, in the most practical as well as the most
philosophical senses. But it’s one thing to believe something, and another to
communicate it, and more exactly to help others work toward it; when it comes
to two key aspects of the Capstone, I know I can and will improve in how I help
my students engage with these issues. On the practical questions of their
future possibilities, I’ve made sure since I started teaching Capstone that the
students produced tangible materials to help: sample
resumes and CVs, job
cover letters and grad school statements
of purpose, and the like. But in each of the three sections to date I’ve
nonetheless come to feel as if many of the students leave the course feeling no
more clear about what’s next than where they began; while I don’t expect that
they’ll identify one definite career or future, I would like them to have a
more specific sense of options and opportunities, and of the next steps related
to them. So this spring I expect to add more conversations and materials to
help them get there—and would love your input on how I can best do that!
If those practical, future-centered materials provide one of the course’s
three focal points and objectives, the other two—shared readings drawn from our
department’s different tracks, and the accompanying class conversations about
those texts and contexts; student work on their required senior portfolios,
where they assemble and reflect on pieces from across their college careers—are
both places where I can see us addressing more fully the philosophical
questions of the meaning and value of an English major, of studying the humanities,
of the kinds of writing and reading our students do in their tracks and
courses. While I hope that both the class discussions and the portfolio work
have helped the students think about these broader questions and stakes, I have
to admit that I haven’t really foregrounded them in any explicit way in the
prior sections. But I’d say it’s time, time to get the students talking and
thinking about why we do what we do, and why doing it is has significantly
meaning and value in our lives, our communities, our society. And again, I’d
love to hear your thoughts on how to introduce such questions into our
discussions, into their portfolio process, into every aspect of a culminating
class like the Capstone.
Next spring
hopes tomorrow,
Ben
PS. So what do
you think? Thoughts on this course and these questions? Hopes of yours for the
spring you’d share?
I do rather wish we'd had capstone when I was there... It's extremely scary going out into the world with an English degree. From all sides you get that question of "What are you going to do with that?" It can very disheartening.
ReplyDeleteHow to fix that problem is a whole different barrel of fish of course. Emphasizing that its possible to be perfectly successful with an English degree is certainly important. Maybe point to all the people you know who have humanities degrees who are successful? Definitely pointing to people outside of academia who use their degrees. I always felt a little pigeon holed as far as job opportunities. Because seriously people love hiring English majors since we can write well.