Learning in the Plural: Essays on the Humanities and Public Life

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Can civic engagement rescue the humanities from a prolonged identity crisis? How can the practices and methods, the conventions and innovations of humanities teaching and scholarship yield knowledge that contributes to the public good? These are just two of the vexing questions David D. Cooper tackles in his essays on the humanities, literacy, and public life. As insightful as they are provocative, these essays address important issues head-on and raise questions about the relevance and roles of humanities teaching and scholarship, the moral footings and public purposes of the humanities, engaged teaching practices, institutional and disciplinary reform, academic professionalism, and public scholarship in a democracy. Destined to stir discussion about the purposes of the humanities and the problems we face during an era of declining institutional support, public alienation and misunderstanding, student ambivalence, and diminishing resources, the questions Cooper raises in this book are uncomfortable and, in his view, necessary for reflection, renewal, and reform. With frank, deft assessments, Cooper reports on active learning initiatives that reenergized his own teaching life while reshaping the teaching mission of the humanities, including service learning, collaborative learning, the learning community movement, and student-centered and deliberative pedagogy.

Author(s): David D. Cooper
Publisher: University of Michigan Press
Year: 2014

Language: English
Pages: 205
City: East Lansing

Contents......Page 10
Foreword: On the Bus, by Julie Ellison......Page 12
Introduction......Page 20
Believing in Difference: The Ethics of Civic Literacy (1993)......Page 24
Moral Literacy (1994)......Page 40
Reading, Writing, and Reflection (1998)......Page 56
The Changing Seasons of Liberal Learning (1998)......Page 72
Academic Professionalism and the Betrayal of the Land-Grant Tradition (1999)......Page 92
Bus Rides and Forks in the Road: The Making of a Public Scholar (2002)......Page 106
Education for Democracy: A Conversation in Two Keys (2004)......Page 122
Is Civic Discourse Still Alive? (2007)......Page 138
Four Seasons of Deliberative Learning (2008)......Page 146
Can Civic Engagement Rescue the Humanities? (2013)......Page 174
Afterword: Speaking and Working in Critically Hopeful Terms, by Scott J. Peters and Timothy K. Eatman......Page 190
Acknowledgments......Page 202