Community Learning

Lyrics on Lockdown
K45.1444 4 CR W 6:20-9:00 Ella Turenne

This course will focus on the uses of the visual  and performing arts and spoken word as a tool for positive social change. Through hands-on collaboration with the Blackout Arts Collective and Island Academy, students will create artistic and dialogical spaces for critically thinking about the crisis of incarceration in this country.  Speakers may include representatives of the Prison Moratorium Project and Malcolm X Grassroots Movement.  Readings include writings by Augusto Boal, Christian Parenti, Manning Marable, Bakari Kitwana, and Bryonn Bain.   Students will create arts based workshops which they will facilitate with incarcerated youth at Rikers Island.  Students do not need to be artists to participate in the course, however, creative building will be an integral part of the curriculum.

Shifting Focus: Video Production and Community Activism
K45.1445 4 CR T 6:20-9:00 Elizabeth Press

From the taping of the police beating of Rodney King to the burgeoning growth of Independent Media Centers around the world, video has become an essential tool of social struggle. This course will be a hands-on class in video production in the service of progressive social change. Class time will be used to: examine the biases of corporate-controlled media; learn the theory and history of video activism; develop basic camera and editing skills; and reflect on lessons learned in the field. Outside of class students will break into groups and collaborate with local community organizations in the conception and production of a short video piece, and subsequently strategize with those organizations about how to most effectively use video in their particular struggles. Readings will include selections from Noam Chomsky, Robert McChesney and Thomas Harding.

Gentrification and Its Discontents
K45.1453             4 CR         F 12:30-3:15          René Francisco Poitevin

This course focuses on the process of community restructuring known as “gentrification” – the displacement of poor residents and local stores by an influx of affluent and middle class people and businesses. Beginning with a case study of the Lower East Side (site of one of the most intense community battles against gentrification of the last thirty years), we’ll look at the theoretical and political debates around urban renewal, community development and neighborhood displacement. We’ll conclude, in collaboration with low income housing advocacy groups, with a closer look at some of the ongoing struggles and campaigns going on in New York City around affordable housing. Readings include Neil Smith’s The New Urban Frontier, Jane Abu-Lughod’s From Urban Village to East Village, and Christopher Merle’s Selling the Lower East Side.

Literacy in Action
K45.1460 4 CR W 6:20-9:00 Maura Donnelly

This course combines volunteer work in New York City adult literacy and English as a second language programs with an academic introduction to the philosophy, history, and current issues of basic education. Students will work as volunteer teachers of reading and writing oral English or mentors at such institutions as the University Settlement, International Rescue Committee, and Fortune Society. In class they will read about and discuss such key issues as which “basic skills” U.S. adults now need, which adults lack these skills and why, the implications for our economy, families, communities, and democracy, the instructional approaches developed for adults, and the steps that might be taken to build support for high-quality, adult basic-skills programs. Throughout the course, students will relate such issues to their own on-site experiences in class discussion and role-playing, and create a portfolio of writing that includes on-site observations, lesson plans, reflections, and a final analytical paper. Readings may include Auerbach's Making Meaning, Making Change; Horton and Freire's We Make the Road by Walking; and the journals Focus on Basics and The Change Agent.