John’s allowing me a guest spot on his “What’s John
Thinking” blog. I just hope everyone understands
that when “funny” was passed out genetically, I was standing at the back of the
line.
This week (Jan. 13-17, 2014), I’ve had the honor of teaching
a 15-hour elective course on the Psychology of Religion to eighteen students
enrolled in the WISP program at the University of Warsaw. WISP--Warsaw International Studies in
Psychology--is an all-English, 5-year psychology program that leads to a master’s
degree.
WISP attracts students from all over the world. Some of my students were Polish; others came
from Belgium, the Philippines, Sweden, Portugal, Malaysia, and Finland. To be honest, I’m not sure about the home
country of every student. I’ll learn
more when I grade their final exams. I
offered them a few extra credit points to introduce themselves to my Oshkosh
students who will be taking a 45-hour Psychology of Religion class during our
May interim.
Some of the students enroll in WISP for the whole 5-year
undergraduate/graduate program, and others come for a semester through the
Erasmus Mundus program which is run by the European Union. According to its
website, Erasmus “aims to enhance the quality of higher education and
promote dialogue and understanding between people and cultures through mobility
and academic cooperation.”
When John and I were here in October, 2011, for the
Alzheimer Europe meeting, I was introduced to WISP when a Polish colleague at
UW Oshkosh connected me with the Dean of the University of Warsaw who
recommended I contact Dr. Emilia Łojek, director of WISP. She kindly invited me to give a lecture to a
class even though it was the first week of the semester and she was burdened
with administrative tasks. Afterwards,
she invited me to submit a proposal to teach a course of my choosing. I selected the Psychology of Religion since
they had never offered it in their curriculum.
However, because I was concerned about my mom’s anxieties when I
traveled, I told them I couldn’t teach in 2012 or 2013.
As many of you know, mom died in May, 2013, and so I was
then free to start talking with the WISP folks about scheduling a class for
2014. This class came at the end of the
students’ fall semester and while I’ll know more when I get their evaluations
after I submit their grades, I feel like it was a success. Several colleagues with experience teaching
European students told me that they tend to maintain social distance from
professors. However, from the first hour
of the course, the students asked questions, made comments, argued with me, and
generally engaged in a lively but respectful way with the ideas I
presented.
One big difference between this group of students and my
students in Oshkosh is that about half were men. In Oshkosh, I often only had one or two men
in my classes.
The WISP students clearly knew a lot about many areas of
psychology. A WISP faculty member told
me that they are required to take only a few courses in other subject
areas. In other words, they lack what we
usually call “general education.”
Although our US students take many hours of classes outside their major,
too often they told me they forget everything they learned in them! Hopefully, the new University Studies Program
at UW Oshkosh is correcting that.
Before I close I need to say something about the building
housing the WISP program and the Polish Psychology Department. It is located several miles from the main
University campus, completely isolated from any other university offices. The University located the psychology faculty
and students there in the 1970s because they were considered subversive by the
Communist regime.
Before the war, the building had been a hospital and a
school, but the Germans took it over and made it their command headquarters
when they occupied Poland. It is located
in the middle of what became the Jewish ghetto of Warsaw. Across the street is a memorial commemorating
the place where the trains loaded Jewish people being taken to Treblinka (the memorial is in the shape of a boxcar). I never entered or left the building without
feeling a chill of evil, and yet I then rejoiced in seeing bright young
psychology students from all over the world going about the business of
learning in the 21st century.
2 comments:
Thanks, Susan. Sounds like a successful endeavor from this distance. Student evals are helpful, but I suspect that you have a pretty good sense of what successful teaching looks/feels like from the 'prof' perspective.
Fascinating! You covered many of the things I was curious about. You and John certainly are having a fun and interesting retirement, and I use that term VERY loosely! It sounds like your week has been a major success, and your students are very fortunate!
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