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The Campus as Laboratory:
Teaching Students to Think Historically About the Built Environment
By William Scott, History Department
The Teaching Problem
History R1, The Practice of History, is an introduction to the discipline
of history and its theoretical and methodological underpinnings. Students
demonstrate their knowledge by completing a research paper on the history
of the University of California, Berkeley. My section chose to research
the history of architecture. Their initial thinking about the subject
was fundamentally antiquarian--concerned with the past for its own sake--rather
than historical, which treats the past as fertile territory for social
analysis. To them, the history of architecture meant telling the story
of the construction of a building, rather than thinking through the ways
that campus spaces produce and reflect changing ideas and practices of
education, gender, engineering, race, memory, ornamentation, and the environment,
to name but a few subjects. At its core, the problem was this: students
didn't know how to think critically about the history of the built environment
and, hence, couldn't develop compelling topics for their research papers.
Teaching Method/Strategy
Having taught middle-school for seven years before graduate school,
I brought to the position of Graduate Student Instructor a wealth of teaching
techniques that I quickly found could be adapted to make concrete the
complex, abstract concepts at the core of university-level teaching. When
I encountered difficulties teaching students the fundamentals of thinking
historically about architecture, I dug into my teaching background and
realized that I needed to take my students on, of all things, a field
trip.
On the day of the lesson, we
walked past Doe Library and gathered in front of Moffitt. After giving
them some background on the buildings, I modeled some historical observations
and questions: Doe Library sits on top of the ground; Moffitt is built
into a hillside. How do these buildings represent changing conceptions
of the relationship between a building and its environment? What does
the memorialization of the Free Speech Movement in the form of a café
tell us about the political history of Berkeley in the 1990s? Quickly,
students chimed in with questions of their own. One student noticed that
Moffitt was mainly built of concrete and wondered whether this reflected
an attempt at a democratic form of architecture. Another continued that
Doe, then, probably represented a claim to elitism in its use of classical
elements like older, Eastern schools. As we continued walking around the
campus, simple observations about architecture began leading to sophisticated
historical questions that often formed the basis of the students' later
research. Throughout, I kept a low profile: occasionally modeling, prodding
them when necessary, pointing out the kinds of questions that might have
historical answers, but mainly allowing for a lot of silent observation
and student-led discussion.
Assessment
That day, students returned to the classroom and used the skills
honed on the campus tour to think about the ways the design of the seminar
room itself contained social meanings and relationships. Their observations
and questions were outstanding for their breadth and sophistication. The
real measure of success, though, was the students' research projects.
One student examined Bowles Hall to historicize masculinity, linking rearrangements
of the men's dormitory to changing ideals of manhood. Another paper looked
at Asian ornamentation on buildings to examine Orientalism on campus.
A third examined students' and faculty members' reactions to Wurster Hall
to trace the history of aesthetic judgment. In these, and other papers,
students developed compelling and sophisticated topics on the history
of space and design linked to their own academic passions.
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