Office Hours:
Tuesday 9:30 - 10:30 am
Wednesday 2:30 - 3:30 pm
and by appointment
Phone: (508) 213-2122
Office: Davis#2, Lower Level
I focus my energy as a teacher on accomplishing two central goals:
First, I want students to receive a firm foundation in the skills, content and vocabulary of literature and writing.
Second, I intend that students will complete their course feeling that looking at literature is a valuable way to explore important questions and that writing is a valuable way to explore and express ideas worth communicating.
I feel my classes are a success if they help students develop the sense of their own ability to read, to analyze, and to write and to make those things a part of their real lives.
Much of my work outside the classroom is in the study of Teaching and Learning, which is all about improving teaching effectiveness. I serve on the Board, and am Past-President, of the New England Faculty Development Consortium which brings together teachers from throughout the region to explore strategies for improving teaching. I have delivered papers locally and nationally on effective and engaging teaching.
Additionally, in spite of the fact, or maybe because, I have one of the best jobs in the world, I am fascinated by looking at the role WORK plays in people's lives. I am currently working on a manuscript evaluating the recent changes in the way people in the U.S. have though about the importance of work in defining who they are.
I also love to ski and to ride horses, and to build things, like my new deck.
I teach a variety of literature and writing courses. Most recently, I have taught American Literature, African American Literature, Introduction to the Novel, Modern Fiction, and World Literature IV (focusing on recent African, Asian, and Latin American Literature). I also teach Expository Writing and advanced Non-Fiction Writing. I created courses in Journalism and Athletes, Fans, & Society, though I haven't taught those lately.