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KURT KOENIGSBERGER

 

Statement of My Teaching Philosophy and Practices

 

I believe that meaningful learning takes place when students integrate domain learning - acquired knowledge about a particular field, whether "British Literature Since 1800," "The Indian Novel in English," or "Post-War British Literature and Culture" - with the kind of analytic skills that will serve them beyond the boundaries of the classroom. Each of my courses invites students to take an active role in their learning and aims to foster a sense of literature as a culturally significant form of expression. Because I also believe that literary significance varies across a range of contexts, I strive to make my classroom an environment in which students challenge each other in ways that highlight the stakes of competing interpretive communities, situations, and values.

When students negotiate and evaluate overlapping, even discrepant cultural contexts - spanning the high and the low, the local and the global, for instance - they become better readers and writers. My classes demand of students a great deal of reading and writing, but not solely for its own sake; strong textual preparation also fosters collegial exchange and collaboration in the classroom. Indeed, one of the primary goals of my courses is that by the end of the semester students come to think of each other as colleagues in a shared intellectual enterprise. To this end my syllabi offer an array of written assignments (experiential narratives, sociocultural reports, book reviews, close reading exercises, online web exhibits, and seminar papers) and classroom activities (discussion, collaborative work, lecture, and student presentations) that encourage students to imagine a range of audiences and situations for their written and oral analytic work.

As the chief instructional audience for this work, I enter into dialogue with my students about their writing not only through extensive written responses but also in individual conferences in which we continue classroom discussions, pose questions to each other, and work on compositional and critical problems together. Yet I am rarely the only audience for whom my students write. My classes feature prewriting activities, writing workshops, and Web-based bulletin boards in the Blackboard environment. The latter in particular afford students the opportunity to engage with the texts and with their colleagues' arguments before we enter the physical space of the classroom, and it encourages students to consider each other as primary - and significant - audiences for their writing.

Students are explicitly the central audience for the research forums or miniconferences I frequently organize toward the end of semesters, in which students present their projects to the entire class and solicit feedback in the form of critical questions, requests for clarification, and constructive comments. From the expository writing classroom to the graduate seminar in the history and critical practice of cultural studies, I require students in my classes to put their growing interpretive and critical skills into practice in research projects that explore texts and contexts that interest them. Students prepare for these projects by engaging regularly in written responses designed to foster close-reading skills, on one hand, and to hone contextual and holistic thinking about texts and their relation to other texts and contexts, on the other. I also encourage students to revise their writing because I believe strongly that for students to master the material and to develop their critical thinking skills, they need to rediscover, reassemble, and reconsider their own approaches to the texts they read; they also need opportunities to refine their writing skills and practices. This is no less true in the graduate seminar room than in the first-year writing classroom: all of my classes emphasize collaboration, textual analysis, and contextual exploration, and students who are working toward increasingly sophisticated research questions and projects especially need to cultivate strong writing and revision strategies.

Because the courses I teach find their places within a general humanities curriculum, I believe that my role is to lead my students to think critically about literature in a variety of textual and cultural situations, not only the situation of a single poem, novel, author, or period. I strive for my lectures and our class discussions to model both sustained attention to the formal complexities of texts and a contextual form of thinking that evaluates textual interventions across a range of cultural settings. I frequently introduce visual art, examples of contemporary cultural production, and documentary sources when my classes discuss texts from the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, and I integrate the materials we read with examples from contemporary high and popular cultural forms. I encourage students to do the same - in their BlackBoard postings, in our classroom exchanges, in their oral presentations, and in their formal written investigations.

I work in my classes to demonstrate the relevance of historically distant texts and ideas to contemporary cultural situations, and I likewise encourage students to consider such texts in the terms of their own writing and culture. Students in my modernism classes are required to analyze such popular and "highbrow" periodicals of the modernist period as The Little Review, The Dial, The Nation and the Athenaeum, Punch, and The Times of London, and think about them in relation to contemporary media. And, for instance, when we discuss F. T. Marinetti's "Futurist Manifesto" and its impact on Wyndham Lewis's Vorticist movement, for instance, I invite students to think about the ethos of the popular film Fight Club as bearing the traces of Futurist aesthetics. But the context-rich forms of analysis that characterize my classroom are not always immediate or familiar to students; in fact, in courses in contemporary British, African, and Indian literature, I ask students to read regularly in online editions of daily and weekly papers from those regions to begin to build a sense of context - and of the kinds of analytic questions appropriate in that context.

Ultimately the interdisciplinary materials my students and I bring to bear on our primary texts represent problems for us to solve collaboratively in the classroom and in our writing: What is the relation of text to text? Text to context? Context to context? The careful posing of such questions enables us to cultivate an integrated learning community, one in which broad-ranging communicative, interpretive, and critical skills are just as important as an understanding of texts as rich formal constructs that are situated socially and historically and that perform significant cultural work.