Redesigning a sustainable English capstone course through a virtual student-faculty partnership

Authors

  • Kellie Keeling University of North Georgia, United States
  • Zoë Phalen University of North Georgia, United States
  • Michael J. Rifenburg University of North Georgia, United States

Keywords:

Capstone courses, students as partners, curriculum development, curriculum assessment, English

Abstract

This collaborative essay between undergraduate students and a faculty member illustrates the importance of partnerships between students and faculty when redesigning courses. We ground this partnering in Students as Partner (SaP) praxis. SaP reinvigorates the faculty and student relationship as one in which both students and faculty serve as active agents in curriculum development, redesign, and assessment. In this essay, we introduce our partnership, locally ground our partnership, and highlight how we redesigned a sustainable English Department capstone course to include a cumulative, integrative assignment. Our partnership was not designed to lead to a quantifiable direct output (i.e., a publication or even a redesigned class); instead, our goal was to build community, to support each other, to learn, to write for ourselves and each other. We conclude by offering brief qualitative data on the effectiveness of our redesign efforts and how our approach may work as a model for redesigning courses in different contexts/institutions.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Published

2021-09-03

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Redesigning a sustainable English capstone course through a virtual student-faculty partnership. (2021). Journal of University Teaching and Learning Practice, 18(7), 244-257. https://open-publishing.org/journals/index.php/jutlp/article/view/530