Faculty: Upcoming Chicago Studies Courses
The City as a Resource for Learning
Courses: Winter 2010 - A list of classes in which you can study Chicago
This Winter, many UChicago students will be advising local
non-profits, driving along 100 miles of the
According to Bart Schultz, the director of the Civic
Knowledge Project and the teacher of next quarter's What is Civic Knowledge? and The
Chicago School of Philosophy, Chicago is a critical resource for students
of political and social movements. Though UChicago is sometimes known for its
cloistered campus and inward-focused lens, "part of the point of my courses is
to suggest that the actual history of the
In fact, the hands-on activities that his and other Chicago Studies course emphasis are exactly how Dewey wanted UChicago students to learn, he adds.
"Both courses offer the opportunity to combine classroom and
experiential learning... [the
Schultz is team-teaching What is Civic Knowledge? a special "Big Problems" course for College third- and fourth-years, with Margot Browning, Associate Director of the Franke Institute for the Humanities and Director of Big Problems.
"We really range across the history of
"We're not interested in teaching 'here are the three branches of government.' [Civic Knowledge] is actually about the basis for community organizing, civic friendship, a healthier and more participatory democracy," he says.
The Business of Nonprofits
In Debra Schwartz's class, the Business of Non-Profits, students will be doing more than studying community activism; they'll be consulting with and advising local non-profits and then presenting their work to the rest of the class. Schwartz will also bring local non-profit leaders in to speak to the class.
"We cover the history of the non-profit sector and, much of
it is rooted in work in
Like Schultz, Schwartz links the value of her course
material to
"Some of the most influential leaders were Jane Addams and
her colleagues, some of whom were on our faculty. One of the great insights
they had at the time was that
She adds: "I don't think you can get quite the depth of experience without this hands-on piece, if you want to really understand the role that a nonprofit plays and how difficult it is to do nonprofit work well."
Non-Profits is an
offshoot of the CS-RSO Campus Catalyst, and enrollment is limited to
participating students. The non-profits range from the
"It's a very diverse group of students," Schwartz said, ranging from Economics majors to Public Policy, Art History and Physics students. "I think it's great, because the kind of organizations we work with have diverse" services and goals.
Making Pictures
Judy Hoffman is bringing Chicago Studies to her Documentary Film Production class.
As part of this two-quarter-long sequence, students will work in groups to document either a portrait of a Chicagoan, a social issue or an historical narrative.
"This is a cinematic social inquiry, using the city as a laboratory for investigation," Hoffman says. "I try to encourage [my students] to get off campus and look at the city and its people, to figure out what really needs to be said."
Past projects have ranged from profiles of
"
Urban Geographers
Love for
The course, according to Conzen, will examine the role cities play in national and regional urban networks. He will lead students to the Regenstein library to view its collection of historical Chicago maps and documents, and on a hundred mile-long fieldtrip along the historical Illinois-Michigan Canal, stopping in the small towns "that make up the Chicago hinterlands" along the way.
Why make
Conzen says the benefits are clear:
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