This article calls for revisiting how we teach anthropology in light of three mutually reinforcing “moments” – the #MeToo Movement, the development of the American Anthropological Association’s first Sexual Harassment and Sexual Assault Policy, and shifting student expectations regarding personal safety and wellbeing. By thinking anthropologically about anthropology, against a backdrop of larger questions for the discipline as a whole, we single out the consequences of the “lone anthropologist” trope as it reproduces idealized notions of fieldwork in ways that limit access to the discipline. We suggest ten practical strategies for changing normative pedagogies as a way to increase benefits and reduce harms as we work to minimize risk for se...
Although the COVID-19 pandemic created challenges for faculty and students alike, it was also a cata...
Anthropology is not just a discipline or a body of knowledge. It also contains a different “ethos” f...
This paper seeks to puncture three powerful myths about the teaching and learning of anthropology th...
#MeToo deals in the everyday ambiguous and intersectional, providing a space for discussion of the g...
Because university campuses are microcosms of broader political and social climates, the increasingl...
Based on a case study of verbal sexual harassment experienced by a young female teacher and her 17-y...
This introduction to the special issue of Journal of Criminal Justice Education titled Teaching Abou...
In early March 2020, Teaching and Learning Anthropology (TLA) initiated a crowdsourced document enti...
In this essay, I describe an incident stemming from a field-based ethnographic exercise I utilize in...
Service-Learning is a popular teaching method that is increasingly being adopted by institutions of ...
Paper Session 2: How do we teach and how are we taught, in the new normal?Hosted by Teachers College...
In this paper, the authors consider the #MeToo movement as an act of public pedagogy. They read #MeT...
Reflecting on our recent experience of online teaching with mainly historically marginalized student...
[Extract] The second special issue of The Journal of Environmental Education devoted to gender and e...
This dissertation is an ethnographic case study of inequity and injustice in U.S. higher education b...
Although the COVID-19 pandemic created challenges for faculty and students alike, it was also a cata...
Anthropology is not just a discipline or a body of knowledge. It also contains a different “ethos” f...
This paper seeks to puncture three powerful myths about the teaching and learning of anthropology th...
#MeToo deals in the everyday ambiguous and intersectional, providing a space for discussion of the g...
Because university campuses are microcosms of broader political and social climates, the increasingl...
Based on a case study of verbal sexual harassment experienced by a young female teacher and her 17-y...
This introduction to the special issue of Journal of Criminal Justice Education titled Teaching Abou...
In early March 2020, Teaching and Learning Anthropology (TLA) initiated a crowdsourced document enti...
In this essay, I describe an incident stemming from a field-based ethnographic exercise I utilize in...
Service-Learning is a popular teaching method that is increasingly being adopted by institutions of ...
Paper Session 2: How do we teach and how are we taught, in the new normal?Hosted by Teachers College...
In this paper, the authors consider the #MeToo movement as an act of public pedagogy. They read #MeT...
Reflecting on our recent experience of online teaching with mainly historically marginalized student...
[Extract] The second special issue of The Journal of Environmental Education devoted to gender and e...
This dissertation is an ethnographic case study of inequity and injustice in U.S. higher education b...
Although the COVID-19 pandemic created challenges for faculty and students alike, it was also a cata...
Anthropology is not just a discipline or a body of knowledge. It also contains a different “ethos” f...
This paper seeks to puncture three powerful myths about the teaching and learning of anthropology th...