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John Stratton, associate professor, has spent several lifetimes
teaching and working in higher education.
In his first lifetime, he received a doctorate from the University
of Nebraska, with a dissertation on the structure of Shakespeare's
plays.
In a later lifetime, he co-authored four books on writing, including
The Writer's Hotline Handbook and Writing on the Job, a Handbook
for Business and Government.
Throughout he has taught freshman composition and many kinds of
literature, has started writing centers and student learning services,
and has been director of freshman composition. He has also held
various brain-numbing posts, including serving as dean of the Schools
of Arts and Humanities and Sciences.
Currently, he teaches courses in writing, including Advanced Composition,
and Technique and Style. He occasionally teaches Shakespeare; someday
he will again teach a course in experimental fiction. He is exploring
the fuzzy world where language and reality rub against each other,
if in fact language can be separated from reality. To what extent
does language shape reality, to what extent does it filter and mold
our experience? Perhaps language so shapes our experience that we
can only experience and become what it will "allow" -
archetypes in motion, bubbles of universal consciousness, metaphors
of a reality that we feel but cannot express. He is passionate about
old garden roses and waking people up to the delight and possibilities
of words.
A Few Thoughts on Teaching from John Stratton
Teaching involves creating encounters - encounters between the
student and the work at hand, whether that work is the student's
writing or a work of literature. I try to set interesting problems,
interesting for all of us, problems that require us to consider
fundamental issues of writing and reading, the problems that students
are used to skipping over.
Students don't always like such encounters. Like the rest of us,
they have comfortable assumptions about the way the world works,
the ways their minds work, and about the level of work that they
can do.
I remind students that they have hired me as their personal writing
coach for the semester. They have asked me to lead them, guide them,
and teach them how to work their mental bodies into better shape.
They say they were signing up for a course. "No," I say.
"You hired me to mess with your mind." And that is the
nature of education, to create useful frustration and discomfort,
to help students learn how to grow and develop - to mess with their
minds so they can mess with the world.
Without frustration there is no need, no reason to mobilize
your resources, to discover that you might be able to do something
on your own, and in order not to be frustrated, which is a pretty
painful experience, the child [i.e., the student] learns to manipulate
the environment.
-Frederick
Perls, Gestalt Therapy Verbatim
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