Title: Classroom Activities: Affect, Pleasure, Activation
1Classroom ActivitiesAffect, Pleasure, Activation
- Susan Edmunds, Karen Hall, and Cristina Stasia
2Purpose of Our Panel
- Offer suggestions for stimulating different ways
of learning in order to engage diverse learning
styles
3The First Day
- Focus on the big picturemajor course themes,
essential definitions, key methods - Be interactiveits difficult to move a class
from silence to discussion, from stasis to
movement, so set an active, participatory tone on
the first day
4First Day Opening Exercises
- Find a course theme in a piece of contemporary
media - Connecting course work to contemporary media
culture and students everyday lives is an
effective method for encouraging student
involvement and investment in class discussions
5First Day Opening Exercises (contd)Strike the
Pose (demo)
6Opening Exercise For the First Day
Who listens to Interpol?
- Make connections between what students know and
do in their daily lives and what their readings
are encouraging them to explore - As an opener to Stuart Halls Encoding/Decoding
essay, ask students to write their favorite band,
favorite store in the mall, last movie they saw
in a theater and last book/magazine they read on
an index card mix the cards and hand each
student a card that is not their own ask
students to find the student presented to them on
the card--without speaking. - Have them introduce their partner and identify
what they decoded to reach that conclusion
7Opening Exercise cont.
- Have their partner explain any disparity--how
they encoded their look with a different
intention - Briefly define encoding/decoding
- Assign Encoding/Decoding
7
8Opening Exercises Beyond the First Day
Vs.
9Opening Exercises Cont.
- Identify and apply key concepts in an article as
a group before turning to a reading assignment - To introduce an essay on film violence, have
students list violent films on the board - Ask them to identify what makes these films
violent (hitting, explosions, victims, etc.) - Ask students if the impact of violence is the
same in all the films and list how it differs
(ex Die Hard vs. Irreversible) -
10Intro Exercise Cont.
- Have students identify why the violence
differs. - This will spark debate. Use the definitions
of strong and weak violence from the article
to ground the debate.
11Activities
- Turn board games into classroom games
12Successful Group Work in Class
13Working with Groups in Class
- Without direction, classroom groups typically
digress into socializing - Provide groups with clear objectives
- Include some form of group reportsstudents can
make reports orally to the class, email their
results to the class, add them to blackboard, or
hand in written work to you depending on time
restraints - Feel free to return to results on subsequent days
or move onevery loose end cant be tied up
14In Class Group Activities
- I dont understand
- Divide the class into groups
- Have each group identify a passage from the
reading members had difficulty understanding - Have groups exchange passages with each other
- Once groups discuss the passage they have been
given, they report to the class - General discussion can then follow until the
passage is adequately interpreted
15In Class Group Activities, contd
- Create a worksheet with questions
- Distribute a worksheet to all students
- Divide the class into groups
- Have students work cooperatively to complete the
worksheet
16Group Work Outside the Classroom
- Any worksheet that can be done in class can be
assigned for outside class work - Any assignment can be made collaborative (see
http//web.syr.edu/kjhall/ETS141/home.htm for a
list of buddy assignments) - First year students are typically intimidated and
frightened buddy or group work can help break
through barriers - Keep in mind that it can be difficult for
students to organize a meeting time, so its
helpful to make blackboard available as an
alternative - A practical choice for outside group work is a
library scavenger hunt where students locate
resources, personnel, and information pertinent
to other coursework
17Response Papers
- Keep in mind that you must directly and
explicitly define the goals and objectives for
student response papers otherwise, you will get
a wide variety of student writing that will be
difficult to assess. - Even though you may think of them as short warm
up exercises, be sure to keep in mind all of the
learnings from the paper writing panel. - One excellent use of the response paper format is
to allow students to voice their gut reactions
on blackboard once initial responses have been
aired, students are more able to move to a
critical, intellectual response in class
discussion.
18From Emotion to Analysis
19From Gut to Brain
- Have students freewrite for ten minutes about
their reaction to a text - When they are done, assign a response paper for
next class - Instruct students to use their gut reaction to
write a critical response - Guide them by providing them with a list of
words/phrases
19
20Transitions Cont.
- Phrases
- Use I feel to buttress an analytical statement
I felt sick when the woman was killed because
the director used a close-up of her face to
illustrate her suffering. This is different than
a mainstream violence scene because... - Use Im confused to support inquiry and
possibly --I'm confused because--the authors
choice to marry off the protagonist contradicts
the feminist politics of... - Use I hated to argue with the text I hated
this movie because the soundtrack was so
overbearing and annoying. I know it was supposed
to be artsy, but if you are trying to raise
awareness about an issue, you should target a
mainstream audience and use a popular soundtrack,
like in the documentary we saw last week...
20
21Note Taking Instruction
- Assign 1-3 class note takers and have them post
notes on blackboard after each class - Share your notes with the class as a model
- Use the teaching station technology to model
effective note takingeither handwritten notes
using the document camera or type-written notes
by projecting word onto the front screen
22Innovative Assignments
- A growing majority of students have produced
multimedia work. Consider assigning a multimedia
project - Consider publishing student work on the web or
having them post their multimedia work on any of
the number of sites available such as youtube.com
23 Developing your personal teaching style
-
- your personality can be an important resource
in the - classroom
24 KNOW YOURSELF
no intellectual or personal trait is a foolproof
asset (example humor) even intellectual
and personal drawbacks can be --with
care--rendered useful(example bad head for
facts)
25It's really just like choking      Â
 ...aikido style
learn to redirect energy that closes learning
down.turn it around to open opportunities for
learning back up
26"Being Yourself" in the classroomrequires a
constant renegotiation of the balance of forces
within you and between you and your students
27Reading and enacting sociological positions in
the classroom
- Students often read their teachers according to
preconceived (and not necessarily identical)
grids of sociological classification.
28 - Teachers coming from abroad and/or from working
and lower middle-class backgrounds, and teachers
who are women, people of color, queer and/or
living with disabilities face added challenges
in the Syracuse classroom.
29It is best to be prepared for this in advance
- Talk with peers and experienced teachers about
their experiences. - Think about how to relate your embodiment as a
teacher to the larger lessons of the course. - Develop strategies for rerouting assumptions that
may be directed at you personally back out to a
more general--and collective- critical
investigation of the world at large.