Description
This conversation with Susie Andrews (Mount Allison University) highlights how she uses creative and hands-on approaches to teaching Asian religions. Susie talks about the importance of building a culture of support and shared success in her teaching—and in academia more broadly. An inspired teacher who has her students build models of ancient Chinese burials using cardboard boxes and who regularly brings homemade playdough to her University classes, she will expand your thinking about the possibilities of embodied and creative practice in all stages of learning. This interview was recorded in the summer of 2021 and released in the Fall of 2021.
Quotes
“Some types of doing invite themselves (into) reflection on the significance of doing as a way to know.” Susie Andrews
“One of the joys of this project is not only the ability to become experts in the material, to really understand that, but also to be together and, maybe for a moment, giggle and find some of that creativity that is so welcome.” Susie Andrews
“How am I going to facilitate this learning opportunity for the students in my class, both locally and then around the globe? It takes a lot of time, it takes a lot of effort, it takes a lot of creativity, and it's so valuable.” Susie Andrews
“I think that learning in the COVID-19 pandemic has been important for me because it asked me to be the person I want to be, the person whose foremost concern walking into a classroom is to let people know they matter, even if they feel lonely, even if in that moment our inevitable suffering individually and as a group, even if that is very present for them.” Susie Andrews
“We tell our stories through the objects around us, and those objects also shape how we can imagine ourselves.” Susie Andrews
Links and References
Susie Andrews, Mount Allison University, Department of Religious Studies
https://mta.ca/directory/susie-andrews
Nathan Hesselink, South Korean Drumming and Dance
https://music.ubc.ca/nathan-hesselink
Michael Puett and Christine Gross-Loh, The Path
https://www.simonandschuster.ca/books/The-Path/Michael-Puett/9781476777849
Sharon Suh, Occupy This Body
https://sumeru-books.com/products/occupy-this-body
Ken Bain, What the Best College Teachers Do
https://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog.php?isbn=9780674013254
Joan Halifax, Being with Dying
https://www.shambhala.com/being-with-dying-223.html
Jessica Zitter, MD
https://jessicazitter.com/
Katheryne Mannix, With the End in Mind
https://withtheendinmind.co.uk/
Wheel of Sources
https://uclalibrary.github.io/research-tips/primary-secondary/
Simran Jeet Singh, Sikh Coalition
https://www.sikhcoalition.org/people/simran-jeet-singh/
Natasha Heller, University of Virginia, Department of Religious Studies
https://religiousstudies.as.virginia.edu/faculty/profile/%20nlh4x
Barbara Clayton, Mount Allison University
https://mta.ca/directory/barb-clayton
Ann Gleig
https://crcc.usc.edu/people/ann-gleig/
Mushrooms for Enlightenment or Why Buddhism is Like Shrek: A Conversation about Teaching with Sangseraima Ujeed
Kate Hartmann: Online Teaching Beyond the Pandemic
José Cabezón: Teaching Tibetan Buddhism as Professor and Practitioner
Jan Willis: Stories from a Black, Baptist, and Buddhist Teacher
Todd Lewis: Social Context and the Power of Imagination
Janet Gyatso, Posthumanism and Animal Ethics in Buddhist Studies
Marcus Evans, Teaching Hip Hop and Buddhist Studies
Rima Vesely-Flad, Learning about Black Buddhist Dharma Teachers and Healing Justice
Embodied Learning on Interdependence
Daigengna Duoer, Teaching a Zen Buddhism Course Online with Student Preferences in Mind
Kerry Brown, Teaching Asian Art as Storytelling
Luther Obrock, Constructing Buddhist Theories of the Body from Ancient Texts
Rongdao Lai, Living Religion in the Classroom: Teaching Chinese Buddhism
Frances Garrett, Teaching Empathy and Collaboration
Ellen Katz, Embodied Experience: Living from the Heart
Norman Farb on Buddhism and Contemplative Science
Wen-shing Chou on Teaching Buddhist Art Using Museum and Gallery Collections
Abishek Amar on Negotiating the Layers: Material History in our Teaching
Natalie Avalos on Anti-Colonial Teaching and Buddhism
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The No-Frills Teacher Podcast
Heal, Survive & Thrive!
Summarize | رادیو سامرایز
The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast
The Mel Robbins Podcast