Stepping into the Work: Expanding understanding of global positionality, responsibility, and opportunity
Haverford College, Haverford, PA, November 10 and 11, 2023
A convening at Haverford College, through partnership among the Community-based Global Learning Collaborative and the Global Engagement in the Liberal Arts (GELA) Network
Stepping In:
The world is interconnected. Humans move. Birds migrate. Fish swim. Seeds ride on the wind. Injustices, wealth, injury, and poverty are inheritances. Inheritance passes across generations. We are interconnected. We are complicit. We are each other’s keeper.
We are not autonomous individuals - as so many generations of higher education teaching and scholarship have implied. One can step into considering the role of higher education in reproducing and potentially dismantling injurious worldviews from multiple vantage points.
In the education abroad and global learning literature, Doug Reilly and Stefan Senders suggested, “We who work in the field of study abroad can begin simply—by replacing the rhetoric of “internationality” with one that is more realistic and more productive: we are all co-inhabitants of a single planet, a planet we are quickly destroying” (2015, p. 250). Our complicity is not only in separating the nation from the “global.” For more than a decade, critical scholars have identified ways in which higher education functions at the intersection of civic engagement and global learning are frequently instrumentalized in class and colonial reproduction (Mitchell, 2008; Zemach-Bersin, 2008). More recently, the focus of these critiques has expanded to wrestle with the coloniality of higher education structures writ large, including not only their off-campus and experiential functions, but expanding to consider how colonial ideology informs core operating assumptions in western higher education (Stein, 2022), informing higher education’s predominant technologies (la paperson, 2017).
Liberal arts colleges and research universities are producing extraordinary volumes of critical analysis identifying these challenges. And it is within these same institutions that we must make applied changes to better step forward in concert with off-campus partners, justice movements, and stakeholders nearby and internationally.
With particular attention to the intersection of expansive, liberal arts and humanistic academic curricula with experiential global and civic learning, this gathering will focus on the ways in which institutional innovations can intentionally upset historic patterns of exclusion and marginalization. Vitally, our attention is not only on disruption, but also on building forward. Building in favor of robust, critically-informed experiential learning that challenges students to live into their roles as next generation resource stewards and facilitative leaders, co-creating more just, inclusive, and sustainable communities. Drawing on many years of effort to connect civic and global learning, presentations and discussions will feature integrative learning and curricular reimagination that support students in aligning their studies, their vocational and professional trajectories, and applied values.
Costs (Registration link forthcoming):
Haverford Institute: Stepping into the Work, $499
Collaborative Discount Rate: $149 (rate for all Collaborative Members, including all employees of member institutions)
Sponsor member scholarship opportunity
For every two institutional representatives sponsor members bring, a community partner, graduate student, or exceptional undergraduate may attend for free
GELA Discount Rate: $249
Lodging:
Residence Inn Philadelphia Bala Cynwyd
Haverford Institute Room Block Secured for Stays between Thursday, November 9 and Saturday, November 11, 2023.
Last Day to Book: Sunday, October 8, 2023
Hotel(s) offering your special group rate:
Residence Inn Philadelphia Bala Cynwyd for 229 USD - 249 USD per night
Book your group rate for Haverford Institute Room Block
Logistics:
Haverford Institute registration will begin at 8:30 am on Friday, November 10; proceedings will begin at 9:00 am. An evening reception begins at 6 pm; attendees have dinner on their own beginning at 7 pm. A lite breakfast and lunch are included with registration. Saturday’s proceedings will begin at 8:30 / 9:00 as well, with the institute concluding by 2 pm that afternoon. A lite breakfast and lunch are also included on Saturday.