The online version of my co-authored article in Minerva (a science, education and policy journal) with Thomas S. Woodson is currently available from Springer publishing. The unofficial draft copy is available for free on my website. I am excited about my first STS-y publication, and invite feedback from anyone who is interested in providing it.
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I have just returned from Woods Hole, Massachusetts near Martha's Vineyard, where I participated in a four day workshop run by Peter Taylor (UMASS-Boston). In the New England Workshop on Science and Social Change, I learned several activities that can help bring about open spaces for dialogue, creative exploration of ideas, and collaborative planning, with the potential of inclusion and empowerment of many diverse participants. I believe that we all came away thinking the experience was very positive. While I found the experience to be very emotionally charged, and thus 'risky', I am also coming back from it excited about the tools that we used and how effective they seemed. I am interested in the potential of such tools as: autobiographical introductions, free-writing, theatre therapy, figure/ground diagramming, narrative therapy, etc. to name a few.
I hope to use such tools to encourage critical thinking among engineering undergraduate students, especially mechanical engineers. |
AuthorLogan primarily uses this blog to: reflect on policy and professionalization issues in STS (e.g. research funding, discipline formation, skill building, job-hunting, policy applications of STS theory) and to disseminate her own scholarship. Archives
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Contributor ForAcademic Professionalism BlogsWomen, Minorities & K-12 STEM Blogs |