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Teaching Culture
The purpose of this blog is to build a community of anthropologists interested in pedagogy and to provide them with a reputable source of information and a way to share news on teaching anthropology, publishing in the field, new innovations, and new books.Search
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Recent Posts
- ESPERANZA SPEAKS: The Power of Ethnographic Storytelling
- Teaching Culture through Tourism: Agency, Authenticity, and Colonialism
- “We are not brains on sticks!” Teaching Anthropology with the Senses
- What online learning taught me about (online) teaching
- Solidarity in Protest: Highlighting Positive Social Change in Urban Costa Rica
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- Five Simple Steps for Helping Students Write Ethnographic Papers
- Eating Culture: Sample Student Assignments for the Anthropology of Food
- Teaching Anthropology of/through Games, Part 1
- Announcing ethnoGRAPHIC: A New Series
- A Teacher’s Review of Ancestral Lines: The Maisin of Papua New Guinea and the Fate of the Rainforest
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Tag Archives: pedagogy
Sharing Syllabi: The Anthropology of Superheroes
Jamon Halvaksz, Associate Professor in the Department of Anthropology at The University of Texas at San Antonio (UTSA), shares the syllabus for his Fall 2015 course, ANT 4843: The Anthropology of Superheroes. read more…
- dateSeptember 30, 2015
- commentsComments Off on Sharing Syllabi: The Anthropology of Superheroes
- posted byAnna
Teaching Anthropology of/through Games, Part 2
In my last blog post, I described my recent course on “Anthropology of/through Games.” Students in the class played, analyzed, and designed games related to anthropological concepts, and they also used ethnographic techniques such as participant observation and interviews to understand participants’ experiences of games. In this post, I take a closer look at game-based pedagogy in theory and practice. read more…
- dateSeptember 17, 2015
- commentsComments Off on Teaching Anthropology of/through Games, Part 2
- posted byKrista Harper
Teaching Anthropology of/through Games, Part 1
In part one of this two-part series, Krista Harper (UMass Amherst) provides insight into her successful Fall 2014 course, “Anthropology of/through Games.” There is so much here that is useful for instructors (as well as gamers). Enjoy! read more…
Assigned Readings: Strategies and Ponderings
To mark the beginning of the fall semester at most US colleges and universities, we would like to return to our series of blog postings by the Anthropology Teaching Forum (ATF) at the University of Texas, San Antonio. Here we … read more…
- dateAugust 24, 2015
- commentsComments Off on Assigned Readings: Strategies and Ponderings
- posted byLeah McCurdy
Thinking about and with “Selfies” in the Classroom
I often long for a classroom in which students eschew electronics in favour of pen and paper, a classroom that favours slow reading and reflection, rather than one where laptop, tablet, and phone use mean that note taking and distracted internet surfing often go hand in hand. But knowing that this is easier said than done, I am happy (at least for now) to settle for a learning environment in which students view their various electronic devices with curiosity rather than complacency, as cultural artifacts of a particular time and place, and of their use of these devices, and of social media, as culturally informed practices. read more…
- dateJune 29, 2015
- commentsComments Off on Thinking about and with “Selfies” in the Classroom
- posted byMaggie Cummings