Place-based WAC/WID Hui2015-12-022015-12-022014-05-082015Revilla, Noʻukahauʻoli. 'Instructor interview for Place-Based WAC/WID writing instruction in English, clip 1 of 12.' Interview with Jim Henry. Scholarspace. Sep. 2015. Web.http://hdl.handle.net/10125/38020This item includes a segment of an instructor interview in a Writing Intensive course in 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?'Brief excerpt from interview: The entire course is a place-based approach. We are situated in Hawaiʻi and as a Kanaka Maoli, a person in the university, as a poet, as someone who cares very much for this ʻāina, it is important for me to teach any way I can to center it here, in Hawaiʻi. Although we do draw on works [by poets] who are more interested in the continent, particularly the West Coast, their place poetics, their poetics of place, are so fierce and interrogate these ideas of belonging and histories and these layers of histories, that I think go really beautifully with our ideas of aloha ʻāina and belonging and home. In Hawaiʻi we have such fraught tensions between belonging, especially between indigeneity, local, settler... At that level, students come with that creative frame… and we can enter these more political conversations through creative writing… That relationship makes the discussion more positive.Duration: 00:01:28Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United Statesplace-based writingwriting across the curriculumwriting in the disciplinesWriting Intensive coursesscholarship of teaching and learningwriting pedagogygeneral education requirementsidentitysense of placeeducational contextdefinitionkuleanaresponsibilityrelationshipcontextvigilanceworkgenderresistancepacificindigenouswomenpoetrylandtreatment of womensexualizationsustainabilitydaughterhawaiian scholarrelationshipspoetpowerful womenplacebelongingidentityaloha ainatensionspoeticscreative writinghawaiiindigeneitypoliticsInstructor interview for Place-Based WAC/WID writing instruction in English, clip 1 of 12Interview