


I have certainly not kept up diligently with posting about my teaching this year. I’ve posted just twice about it since January, and once was a re-run! I blame . . . well, pretty much everything, including how much of my energy was spent this term on administrative stuff that was at once important and kind of mind-numbing. But really it’s probably as simple as: a habit, once broken, is hard to repair, however much you miss it, or however guilty you feel about it (however irrationally). I was talking with a good friend recently who commented how helpful she’d found the comment “it’s OK to change your interests.” Has my interest in blogging about my teaching just declined? The proof, I guess, is in the posting.
And yet: I have missed it! I continue to believe, as well, that it is a habit that did me good. I became a better teacher because I took regular opportunities to reflect on what I was doing and how it was going. As I approach the end of my teaching career–I don’t know when that will be, yet, but I know it’s coming eventually!–I know I will be glad to have this record of so much of it, as well.
This felt like a difficult term, though mostly for reasons not directly to do with my own teaching. The string of snow days and cancellations didn’t help: I got pretty tired of gaming out revisions to our reading schedules and deadlines. Disruptions aside, I think my two classes actually went pretty well. I was anxious heading into the Brit Lit survey class, because it did not go well the last time I taught it–and that’s even without taking into account that mid way through it, the pandemic broke out and we were all sent home. The reading list this time was pretty much the same, but it all felt very different, in a good way. How much of that was me, doing things differently (better) and how much of that was the unpredictable chemistry of the group, the room, the moment? I loved working through Great Expectations with them, of course, but the biggest treat for me was The Remains of the Day, which was on the reading list for the course in 2020 but had to be cut when everything blew up. It remains a top 10 novel for me, and its insights and impact feel as urgent to me now as they did a decade ago–more, perhaps. And of course the final scene on the pier still makes me weep.



My other course this term was a combined Honours and graduate seminar on George Eliot. I have taught a grad-only version before but this was my first time being able to offer it to Honours students as well. Because many of the undergraduates in the class had read at least one George Eliot novel with me before (along with an array of other Victorian novels), and some of the graduate students had never read her–or much Victorian fiction at all–there really was no meaningful difference in level or preparation, and the discussion was smart and energetic and invested the entire term. Well, OK, it flagged a bit while we were making our way through Felix Holt, which was not a general favourite–but that was also during the worst of our winter weather, so I choose to think it’s not really, or not entirely, Felix’s fault. Silas Marner was a clear favourite, but to my delight and relief, so was Daniel Deronda, which I don’t think anyone in the class was really looking forward to. They were all very happily surprised at how (relatively) fast-paced and provocative and interesting it is. I would have loved to include Middlemarch, but you can only do so much in 12 weeks. (I have put it on the reading list for the Dickens to Hardy class in the fall, as compensation.)
The last time I taught the grad seminar version of the George Eliot class was 2015, and it was interesting to notice some shifts in the interests and questions students brought to our discussions. To some extent this was a function of the critical essays I assigned for the graduate students, which I refreshed to highlight recent developments in the scholarship. But it was still up to them what they specifically brought up in class, and the undergraduates were not doing those readings (or at least were not required to)–and across the board it was clear that disability studies, eco-criticism, and gender were key interests. It’s not that gender wasn’t a central topic of discussion in the past, but the terms of the discussion have evolved: we had as lively discussions about Gwendolen as a possibly “ace” character, for example, as about Maggie’s non-conformity with 19th-century norms of femininity. There didn’t seem to be much energy for talking about empire, even with Daniel Deronda, and my expectation that the novel’s conclusion would provoke controversy about Palestine and Zionism did not really play out.
The spectre haunting everyone’s pedagogy this year was AI. I really tried not to let concerns about it preoccupy me. By and large, I trust my students to want an authentic experience, to be bringing their real selves to the classroom and to the work they do for me. I never had the feeling with any of the work from the students in the George Eliot seminar that it wasn’t truly their own. Could I be wrong about this? Sure. But I got to know them all pretty well, and unless I have learned nothing in 31 years of teaching, there’s not much overlap between “students who want to take an entire seminar about George Eliot” and “students who want to take short-cuts.” I wasn’t always so sure with the online tests in the survey class: some of the answers did have that combination of vagueness and fluency, a kind of unnatural glibness with very little actual substance, that gives off the whiff of AI. Most of the time that meant they also didn’t meet the requirements for full credit, which typically included things like “give a specific example from the reading to support your answer, explaining clearly how it does so.” In those cases I could just give partial credit, noting how the answer fell short without getting tangled up in having to prove AI use. Other times I had to shrug and give credit for a “good enough” answer, even if I doubted its authenticity. Usually I noted that doubt in my feedback, explaining why the answer had made me wonder, in case knowing that was in any way useful to the student.
I’m not at all sanguine about the corrosive effects of AI on teaching and learning, and I don’t kid myself that there is any way to “AI-proof” my assignments. I remind myself, though, that one of my worst teaching experiences ever was the term–not that long ago!–when 1 in 5 of my first-year students was found guilty of an academic integrity offence for literally cutting and pasting material from sites on the internet. AI is worse: more insidious, and at least potentially more widely damaging to the trust I consider essential to my work. I have tried hard over the years to think about plagiarism as a symptom rather than a moral failing and to do what I can to create the conditions in which students neither need nor want to resort to it. The same is surely true of AI, but it’s impossible to ignore how much harder it keeps getting, not just to ward it off (I mean, Copilot is literally integrated in the software they are provided by the university!) but to manage those conditions. Classes are larger, everyone is busier and under more pressure, students’ preparation and expectations and needs vary widely. All I can really do is speak up for and model the value of the process and the work itself. I do feel pretty sure that, whatever complaints they no doubt have about me and my pedagogy, my students can tell I am there for it and for them, that I am genuinely committed and enthusiastic. I hope they appreciate that I continue to prioritize both trust and authenticity on both sides. When I can’t bring that positive energy to the room any more, it will definitely be time for me to retire.
AI is a problem we all have to deal with, but I’m pretty fortunate in that I teach small(ish) ESL classes of eighteen students max, which means I can control the students’ use of tech (I actually have a slide that says this is a no-tech lesson, at which point phones and laptops have to go into their bags). I also have weekly writing prompts using pen and paper, which gives me a baseline of their writing ability – meaning if they come up with perfect writing later, I have something to push back with.
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I think a lot about the frequent advice to “just do all writing in class” or otherwise go old school, but this is tricky both because of class sizes and because of our university’s accommodations policy. If I insist on pen and paper and in-class writing I can either do only ‘completion’ exercises (e.g. credit just for doing something) or make a lot of arrangements for the students (typically around 20% these days) who require alternative arrangements, including for note-taking in class.
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Yes, it’s tricky. All you can do is your best to make students put in some effort for the good scores they’ll inevitably get…
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I’ve been thinking about that too, about interests changing. I took a midyear glance at my log to see if my reading habits were changing this year (because they’d surprised me a little at the end of last year) and was, again, a little surprised. Where I thought, for instance, that I was reading more this year, it was actually the opposite (and by 20%, no small amount). But as you’ve mentioned about your changed habit, I am missing certain things, too, so as you say, it’s just a matter of repairing the broken habits. But sometimes interests do actually change and it can be unsettling when they’ve secured daily habits and regular pasttimes for us. I enjoy reading about whether/how your students respond to certain books and authors, and the rereading that you naturally do as part of your role. But if you were to decide you didn’t want to write about it anymore, I’d still enjoy the bookchat.
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I appreciate your comment, Marcie! I agree that noticing what we are missing ourselves is a worthwhile consideration: I wouldn’t want to blog about any topic because I felt obligated to, because really I’m only answerable to myself here! Even writing up this post felt good, though, which is something I will keep in mind when next year’s classes begin. It just clears my head somehow.
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I love your Blog and learning about literature and your experiences teaching students. As a retired lawyer, who majored in English Literature and creative writing at the University of Iowa (Home of the Writer’s Workshop), all kinds of Literature are a lifelong interest. I appreciate your insights about some of my favorite writers. Thank you! Looking forward to your next class!
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Thanks, Iris! I’m looking forward to my next classes too, especially the fall iteration of 19thC Fiction from Dickens to Hardy. The book list I have settled on highlights issues of ‘reform’: Hard Times, North and South, Middlemarch, and Jude the Obscure. It feels ambitious these days assigning a book as long and dense as Middlemarch for a third-year class, but every time I have risked it, it has proved life-changing for at least a few students and it seems right to keep making this a possibility. 🙂
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I also enjoy your « teaching » posts hugely.
I have decided regarding the use of AI by students not to let it weigh on me. Some definitely use it but as I can’t prove I don’t even try to start a procedure against them.
If a student is clearly using it in a formative assessment, I have started asking them to come and have a chat with me in my office. Some will claim it is their own work, others acknowledge it’s not but it does make most of them more cautious when tackling the summative assessment.
By the way, I don’t know if you read the UK Guardian but they have published a list of the 100 best novels as chosen by a panel of writers and critics and Middlemarch came at the top with 56 nominations.
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One thing I introduced this year in my 3rd year course in the fall was a mandatory conference with me about their essays. This is a class of 36 and they choose one of 2 different deadlines for the essay, so the logistics weren’t overwhelming around each deadline and I think the meetings were really helpful, both for the assignments and for breaking the ice and showing them how helpful one-on-one guidance can be. Boosting their confidence about their plans and working with them on a good process seemed like useful steps towards making AI seem less tempting. I believe it worked!
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