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Making
a Place for Learning
The
AYA's fall assembly focused on both the tangible and the intangible
elements that fuel Yale's educational process.
February
1994
by Marc Wortman
Located
in the heart of a distressed city and embarked on massive renovations
of its own, Yale
has become increasingly concerned of late with its surroundings
as a place for teaching and scholarship. But the successful pursuit
of those activities involves more than a comfortable physical setting.
And for two days last fall all of the ingredients came under scrutiny
as part of the semiannual assembly of the Association of Yale Alumni.
Entitled "Yale as an Environment for Learning," the gathering
took place October 14-16 and brought some 250 AYA delegates and
guests back to New Haven for a series of lectures and panel discussions
on subjects that ranged from who does the teaching to the relationships
Yale students develop with the world beyond the campus.
Carlos
R. Moreno '70, who organized the assembly, began the proceedings
by declaring that "the foremost question for this assembly
is, will Yale prepare students for life in the 21st century?"
But preparing students for the next century, according to Moreno,
is not just an academic matter, and requires attention to at least
four major aspects of the educational environment: the curriculum,
interactions with the community, the quality of life, and the scholarly
collections.
Few people
on the faculty have such a complete view of today's Yale
and its relationship to personal development as does one of its
newest leaders, Dean of the College Richard Brodhead '68, who was
the assembly's keynote speaker. A member of the faculty since he
received his doctorate in English in 1972, Brodhead studies the
impact of social and cultural changes on 19th- and 20th-century
American literature. In his new post, he must now oversee an ongoing
change in the social and cultural makeup of Yale. No area has presented
as complex a set of issues for the contemporary university or aroused
such public controversy as what Brodhead termed, in the title of
his lecture, "The Challenge of Multiculturalism."
Brodhead
described the current debate as one in which a previous era's "internally
coherent cultural education" is held up for either attack or
defense by the battling sides. According to Brodhead, those who
advocate changes in the curriculum have "a suspicion that different
experiences are hidden behind that previous unity, that we need
to attend to another possible side of the story." On the other
side are those who see chaos as an inevitable outcome of such change.
In their view, Brodhead said, "Multiculturalism multiplies,
and it disestablishes."
The current
debate at Yale, Brodhead
continued, is part of a much wider transformation taking place throughout
the country. "Multiculturalism plays out a drama in the educational
realm that originates in the outside society," he said. "In
the classroom, we might term it equal curricular opportunity."Brodhead
pointed out that throughout history higher education has constantly
revised the areas that it finds useful and meaningful for study.
He noted that although he was steeped in a traditional American
literary canon, he has recently added works by such figures as Harriet
Beecher Stowe, Louisa May Alcott, and Frederick Douglass to his
course reading lists and is working on a recently unearthed narrative
by an overlooked, 19th-century black intellectual. "My teaching
and work have been immensely enriched," he said, "by works
outside the traditional canon. The addition of these authors changes
the meaning of everything and makes you realize how flat the field
of vision was before. These changes have resulted in a real renovation
of education."
However,
Brodhead was quick to point out that pitfalls abound in pursuing
what he called an "inclusionistic curriculum." There is,
he said, "an undeniable danger of tokenism. No educational
program has a monopoly on wisdom. There is a bigoted way of opposing
bigotry, and the notion that only one of that kind can teach works
of that kind is wrong. The world of separate groups is the world
of Yugoslavia. We need common structures and values to protect separate
groups from the depredations of other separate groups."
Brodhead's
theme was picked up in another form during the assembly sessions
on Yale and its relations with the city of New Haven. The increasing
impact of New Haven's woes on Yale has been widely reported. Less
well known is the importance of Yale's many programs dedicated to
the surrounding community -- and the benefits they bring not only to
New Haven but to Yale. "New Haven is an integral part of the
learning environment at Yale," said Moreno in the course of
moderating a panel on clinical programs and community outreach.
The panelists included Yamalee Birmingham '76, '95MD, who cofounded
a Medical School program to pair medical students with pregnant
women in the community. The program assists the women, who are often
poor and unprepared for the demands of pregnancy, and also trains
students in hands-on clinical and public health service. Panelist
Henry Fernandez '93JD cofounded and now directs leap (Leadership,
Education and Athletics in Partnership), a mentoring program for
New Haven children. Primarily a summer program, with continuing
contact between the children and their mentors during the academic
year, leap has grown into the city's largest children's service
agency. "We work with the poorest children in the poorest neighborhoods
in the city," said Fernandez. "It makes a huge difference
in the way that Yale is perceived."
Another
form of contact between the communities
is represented by a program at the School of Architecture known
as the first-year building project, which was outlined to the delegates
by the school's dean, Fred Koetter. For the past 27 years, Yale
architecture students have chosen a design and building project
to undertake in the community, held a design competition among themselves,
and then built the winning design during the following summer. In
each of the past five years, the students have built single- or
two-family dwellings in poor neighborhoods in association with Habitat
for Humanity. Beyond the significant benefits for the families who
help to build and then occupy the houses and the neighborhood improvements
that result, Koetter believes the projects have had enormous educational
importance for the students. "Many of our students alter their
career objectives as a result of this experience," he said.
According
to Stephen Wizner, the William O. Douglas Clinical Professor of
Law, his students, too, may find their careers changed by contact
with the city. Wizner oversees what he describes as a "large,
diversified law firm," the Law School's clinical programs,
with a $1 million annual budget dedicated to providing legal aid
to city residents who would otherwise be unable to afford it. "New
Haven," said Wizner, "is an incredibly valuable location
to be in. Sometimes students can only learn experientially."
As participants in the program, the law students represent local
clients in a range of legal areas, including housing, disability,
immigration, and prison issues. And they are reaching out in other
directions as well. Recently, students in clinical programs from
the schools of Law, Architecture, and the School of Organization
and Management have joined forces to launch a housing and community
development clinic.
The
assembly's Friday afternoon session shifted the focus from Yale's
relations with the city to the University itself. Most of the delegates
dispersed to the residential colleges to meet with faculty members,
fellows, and students to get a firsthand sense of the undergraduate
living environment. Retired Rear Admiral and former U.S. Ambassador
to Kenya Gerald Thomas brought together four students and two faculty
members with 20 delegates in his living room to talk about life
at Davenport College. But he and his colleagues pointed out that
the residential colleges are no longer the only choice for student
housing. In the past few years, according to University administrators,
there has been a surge in the number of undergraduates choosing
to live off campus, most often because they can do it for less money
than living and eating in the colleges. That group now accounts
for slightly under 15 percent of the student body, and the trend
has raised fears that the college system might be undermined. But
Thomas and students from Davenport said that those fears have not
been realized because most students living off campus continue to
keep close ties to their colleges through social events and other
activities.
Regardless
of where Yale students live these days,
they must all rely heavily on one of the University's greatest resources,
its powerful collections in a vast range of areas, from obscure
papyrus manuscripts to some of the best-known paintings anywhere.
Although the collections draw visitors from around the world, they
remain above all teaching and research tools, a point impressed
on those delegates who took one of the special tours provided by
the assembly organizers. Faculty members who work directly with
the materials served as expert guides through such well-known treasure
houses as the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, the Art
Gallery's Garvan Collection of American Furniture, and the Sterling
Library's Cole Porter collection.
For
some of the delegates, the most intriguing of the collections was
the least known. According to Richard Rephann '64MusM, the director
of the Collection of Musical Instruments, his domain is the only
such resource at a major university. The collection of more than
800 instruments is housed in a historic former fraternity
house on Hillhouse Avenue and is particularly strong in European
pieces made between 1550 and 1850. "One could not form this
collection today," said Rephann, "even if one had unlimited
funds." Rephann, who teaches harpsichord at the School of Music,
pointed out the great educational advantage offered by such a collection
for students who can listen to and play instruments like those used
by Johann Sebastian Bach.
At Friday
evening's closing dinner in Commons, President Richard Levin addressed
the delegates and guests, touching on many of the assembly's themes.
"There is a very special culture that makes learning possible,"
he concluded, describing that culture as one that permits "untrammeled
freedom of inquiry and expression."
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