Instructor interview for Place-Based WAC/WID writing instruction in Upper Divison English, clip 1 of 12

Date
2015
Authors
Place-based WAC/WID Hui
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Interviewer
Henry, Jim
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Abstract
Brief excerpt from interview: I wanted students to have the opportunity to write about a place that is significant to them. For many of us, we may grow up in Hawaiʻi, but we may have moved around a lot or we may not have had the opportunity to learn about the places where we live... Not just its current status but what it was like... how it was recorded in the moʻolelo, the stories or the histories. [The students] began with readings from a book called 'An Atlas of Radical Cartography' and it was to show them that mapping can be used to promote social change. The texts I chose were the ones that I really enjoy reading, so the epic tale of Hiʻiakaikapoliopele was like the cornerstone text. It was the one that really anchored the course because it brings together these beautiful moʻolelo of places and actually she does an entire circuit of Oʻahu... So students were bound to find a place on Oʻahu that they could write about. I asked them to do different writing assignments... I had them write different kinds of papers so they can engage in different kinds of writing, but part of what they're trying to develop through the course is a way of helping others to grow aloha ʻāina for these places. As a writer, your job is to grow that aloha ʻāina for your readers.
Description
This item includes a segment of an instructor interview in a Writing Intensive course in Upper Divison English at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa. The interview was conducted in 2014, and in this clip the interviewee is responding to the question 'What elements of your syllabus and classroom plans reflect a place-based approach?'
Keywords
place-based writing, writing across the curriculum, writing in the disciplines, Writing Intensive courses, scholarship of teaching and learning, writing pedagogy, general education requirements, identity, educational context, sense of place, kind of learning, cartography, land ownership, hawaii, hawaiian kingdom, overthrow, mapping, social change, urbanization, kuleana, kuleana lands, course readers, cartography, radical cartography, hiiakaikapoliopele, hiiaka, pele, oahu, storied places, wahi pana, moolelo, epic literature, stories with strong female protagonists, moo, reptilian water deities, kilauea, hawaii island, makapuu, moolelo touring, waimanalo, hawaiian homestead lands, different kinds of papers, different kinds of writing, aloha aina, writing to inspire change, personal significance of place, history of place, moolelo, 1924, maps, land ownership, overthrow, cartography, mapping and social change, development projects, kauai, oahu, field trip, hawaiian homestead, writing genres, role of writer, past history, contemporary history, wind farms, wind energy
Citation
Fujikane, Candace. 'Instructor interview for Place-Based WAC/WID writing instruction in Upper Divison English, clip 1 of 12.' Interview with Jim Henry. Scholarspace. Sep. 2015. Web.
Extent
Duration: 00:06:45
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Related To
English 470: Studies in Asia-Pacific Literature (Mapping the Literatures of Hawaii)
Table of Contents
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States
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Local Contexts
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