English students at home in their department
ĆŪĢŅapp College English alumni are āsorta ticked now,ā according to the tongue-in-cheek Prof. Bill Vande Kopple. Alumni who graduated before 2010 are seeing a world of opportunities open up in ĆŪĢŅappās English department, and current students are reaping the benefits.
In recent years, faculty have initiated several programs to foster community between themselves, students, staff and even alumni, who may not have witnessed the changes while studying at ĆŪĢŅapp but are invited back to participate in the new efforts.Ā
āOne bookā unifies
In the fall of 2009, the department launched āOne Book, One Department.ā A brainchild of Prof. Gary Schmidt, the initiative offers free copies of the yearās designated book to interested students, staff, and faculty members. Faculty members host discussion groups in their homes for interested readers.
In its inaugural year, the department chose to read by Cormac McCarthy. In 2010, the community gathered around by Markus Zusak. And in 2011, the department deviated from the concept of choosing just one book and offered discussions on four selections: Maurice Manningās , G. Willow Wilsonās , Jonathan Safran Foerās and Marilynne Robinsonās . This year, the department returned to the one-book model by reading Yann Martelās .
Schmidt talked about the departmentās vision for āOne Book, One Departmentā: āIt wasnāt to say necessarily, āOK, everyone has this book in their back pocket now,ā but that weāve become closer as a community. And we think that that has shown itself in such things as classes where people may be more willing to talk because they just know each other.ā
Schmidt points to a recent Life of Pi discussion at a professorās home to illustrate the programās impact: āWe were supposed to start whenever, and I bet we were almost an hour into it before we actually started the book. It was just so much fun being together.ā
Vande Kopple is also interested in bridging the gap between students and instructors. āItās that professor-student community, which is number one for me,ā he said.
Opportunities available year-round
Another opportunity for community-building is the annual writerās retreat. Though run by the English department and attended by many English majors, the retreat is open to all students. Vande Kopple said that students from other departments have found affirmation in the craft on the retreats.
It is likely that theyāve also found a lot of funāthe retreats feature writing contests, jumping from snow banks and āwicked, wicked snowball fights,ā as Schmidt describes them.
āOne year we made them go up one by one on a lookout and howl like a wolf before they could eat their supper,ā Vande Kopple remembered. Last year, 40 studentsāmore students than the beds availableāmade it for the wintery weekend, some sleeping on couches just to get the chance to participate.
And for those who prefer not to brave the cold weather, the English department offers a warm meal through āSoup Mondays.ā Every Monday during the January interim, English department faculty and staff provide soup for students between morning and afternoon classes on campus.
The departmentās annual repertoire of community-building events also includes the Halloween-themed Unhappy Hour, the ĆŪĢŅapp Writers Read student symposium, and a spring reception for honors theses.
Beyond events
While premiering a slate of community events, the English department has also revamped its curriculum over the past few years. There are now three English majors (literature, writing, and linguistics) and a new internship requirement for each.
Adding to the changes is what Vande Kopple calls a ācritical massā of student and alumni publications. In 2009, the department launched , an online resource for students interested in having their work published. Schmidt says students often stop by to show professors their published works. āItās been an exciting time,ā he said.
Alumni community
As for alumni, they are taking notice of this exciting time, partly due to the departmentās following on . And Vande Kopple is quick to invite alumni to participate in English department programming.
Alumna Bekah Williamson ā12 came back to ĆŪĢŅapp for the departmentās fall picnic, and one of her comments that day has stuck with Vande Kopple: "I was ready to graduate and say goodbye to college, but I wasn't ready to say goodbye to the English Department."
For him, Williamsonās words are proof that the departmentās community-building efforts are working.
āYou know, I donāt know when Iām going to retire, but Iām going to retire probably being happier in the profession than earlier,ā Vande Kopple said. āI almost canāt take knowing so many people; itās almost too much for me."