
CAPTION: ULM Assistant Professor of English Dr. Patrick Morgan was recently featured in publications from Princeton University Press and Oxford University Press. 听
MONROE, LA 鈥 Imagine sitting down to analyze a poem in your college English class, then being handed a rock as well.听 That鈥檚 what it鈥檚 like taking a class with Dr. Patrick Morgan, Assistant Professor of English at the 91精品福利一区二区三区.听 A lesson Morgan teaches on reading rocks and poetry has been published by Princeton University Press as a book chapter titled, 鈥淩ock Your Classroom,鈥 in The Pocket Instructor: Writing.听 This lesson stems from his larger commitment to interdisciplinary research, studying the connections between geology and literature, including two additional book chapters published recently by Oxford University Press.听
The Pocket Instructor: Writing compiles fifty active learning lessons from around the country introducing students to academic writing across the humanities and sciences.听 As the volume鈥檚 editors write, 鈥淭o teach academic writing is to teach thinking鈥攖hat is to say, every step that goes into creating an insightful, rigorously argued essay.听 Success lies in teaching students not simply to answer questions but to ask their own, to follow their curiosity and question their assumptions鈥 (2).听 The book contains instructions and reflections for how to teach writing across every stage of the process, from building an idea, drafting, revising, and transferring academic writing into other forms of writing.听 Although the lessons are geared toward the college classroom, they are also adaptable to high school classrooms.听
鈥淢y lesson focuses on teaching students different ways of writing in the humanities and sciences, via poems and rocks,鈥 says Morgan.听 鈥淭he lesson gets students actively thinking about what it means to write about primary texts in different disciplines.听 How do literary scholars analyze a poem and how do geologists analyze a rock?听 How can juxtaposing these two approaches help us think about the larger connections and differences across the humanities and sciences?鈥澨 听
As Morgan explains in his chapter, 鈥淚鈥檝e found this exercise especially valuable because it challenges students鈥 conceptions of a 鈥榯ext,鈥 broadening the horizon of what qualifies as a primary object of study.听 [...] By seriously considering sedimentary rocks as texts, we can illuminate central issues regarding interpretation, such as intention and how we read 鈥榯he human鈥 vs. 鈥榯he non-human.鈥 Ultimately, I want students to walk away with a larger sense of the kinds of things poems say, the kinds of things rocks say, and the ability to radically reimagine the way they look at a text鈥 (38-39).听
鈥淪o seamlessly does Dr. Morgan鈥檚 exercise progress from the 鈥榩ithy鈥 to the profound that, by the end of a 鈥榬ockin鈥 class, students will marvel at the transformative power of writing,鈥 says Dr. Janet Haedicke, Professor of English at the University of Louisiana Monroe. 听鈥淚 suspect that, long after such a class, they will be reading themselves and their worlds as texts with beautifully 鈥榩orous dotted lines.鈥欌听
The published lesson 鈥渃learly shows that fundamental scholarship is not disconnected from applied scholarship,鈥 says Dr. John M. Pratte, Dean of the College of Arts, Education, and Sciences.听 Indeed, this lesson has been published around the same time as two other book chapters focusing on geology鈥檚 connections with literature.听 Published this summer, TheOxford Handbook of Ralph Waldo听Emerson contains Morgan鈥檚 chapter about the way Emerson connected geology with his fight against slavery.听 The chapter is titled, 鈥淭ranscendental听Geologies:听Emerson, Anti-Slavery, and the听Kairos听of Deep Time.鈥澨 Later this semester, a long-term project comprehensively summarizing the history of American literature鈥檚 relationship with geology will be published as a chapter, 鈥淕eology in American Literature,鈥 in The Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Literature.听
If the history of science and its connections with literature intrigues you, read more about Morgan鈥檚 research in the links below.听
Links for Further Reading听
鈥淩ock Your Classroom鈥 in听The听Pocket听Instructor:听Writing: <听听>听
鈥淭ranscendental听Geologies:听Emerson, Anti-Slavery, and the听Kairos听of Deep Time鈥 in The Oxford Handbook of Ralph Waldo听Emerson: <听听>听
鈥淕eology in American Literature鈥 in听The Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Literature [to be published later this semester, link will become active upon publication]: <听 >听
听For further information, please contact Patrick Morgan at pmorgan@ulm.edu.听