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Chapter 7 - The Warwick–Monash Co-teaching Initiative

Shakespeare and Portal Pedagogy

from Part II - Reimagining Shakespeare with/in Universities

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 February 2023

Liam E. Semler
Affiliation:
University of Sydney
Claire Hansen
Affiliation:
Australian National University, Canberra
Jacqueline Manuel
Affiliation:
University of Sydney
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Summary

This chapter describes an innovative collaborative teaching model developed by colleagues Paul Prescott (Warwick), Fiona Gregory (Monash) and Gabriel García Ochoa (Monash) using what is known as ‘the international portal space’, a state-of-the-art teleconferencing system developed by the University of Warwick, England and Monash University, Australia. This technology is fundamentally different to platforms such as Zoom and Microsoft Teams, the use of which became widespread during the COVID-19 global pandemic of 2020. Unlike Zoom, portal pedagogy is predicated on in-person learning that it combines with digital technology to allow students from different institutions to work together in real time (in our case, early morning in the United Kingdom and evening in Australia) and in real spaces on a shared syllabus. In the unit ‘Local and Global Shakespeares’, offered in 2016 and 2017, students on opposite sides of the globe were able to engage with Shakespeare, building their own and a shared knowledge of Shakespearean performance in local and global frameworks. Working alongside students from a different cultural context also forced students to reconsider their understanding of the ‘natural’ and ‘given’ in relation to Shakespeare, and thus, in relation to their understanding of culture more broadly. This chapter examines the application of portal pedagogy and other strategies that we employed to show how this unit sought to reimagine the possibilities of internationally collaborative Shakespearean teaching and learning.

Type
Chapter
Information
Reimagining Shakespeare Education
Teaching and Learning through Collaboration
, pp. 113 - 126
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2023

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References

García Ochoa, Gabriel García, McDonald, Sarah, and Monk, Nicholas, 2016. ‘Embedding Cultural Literacy in Higher Education’, Intercultural Education 27:6, 546–59.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kelly, Philippa, 2011. The King and I (London: Continuum International Publishing).Google Scholar
Kim, Terri, 2010. ‘Transnational Academic Mobility, Knowledge and Identity Capital’, Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education 31.5, 577–91.Google Scholar
Monk, Nicholas, McDonald, Sarah, Pasfield-Neofitou, Sarah, and Lindgren, Mia, 2015. ‘Portal Pedagogy: From Interdisciplinarity and Internationalization to Transdisciplinarity and Transnationalization’, London Review of Education 13.3, 6278.Google Scholar
Vygotsky, Lev, 1978. Mind in Society: The Development of Higher Psychological Processes (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press).Google Scholar
Warwick student feedback, 2016. University of Warwick module evaluation, ‘Local & Global Shakespeares IL021’.Google Scholar

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