Call for Applicants: Incorporating Latin America and the Caribbean into Teaching in Environmental History

Jun, 2023

Applications are now open for the second iteration of RECSLAC’s (Red de Ciencias y Saberes en Latinoamérica y el Caribe, Network on Sciences and Knowledges in Latin American and the Caribbean) one-day pedagogy workshop on integrating Latin American and Caribbean history of science into teaching in adjacent fields.

The workshop will be held just before the American Society of Environmental History conference in Denver, Colorado on Wednesday, April 3rd, 2024.  They seek participants from diverse backgrounds who are interested in learning more about Latin American history of science and the environment and integrating content on the region into their courses. Preference in the workshop will be given to people who are not experts in Latin America, and the workshop will be particularly useful for advanced graduate students and early career faculty and professionals. RECSLAC will offer scholarships to at least five US-based and five Latin America-based graduate students, early career scholars or contingent faculty members to offset the cost of travel to the workshop and attendance at the ASEH meeting. They encourage workshop participants to attend the ASEH meeting and present their work. The application materials for the ASEH meeting can be found on the ASEH website.

The workshop will be led by Fred Freitas (North Carolina State University), Claudia Leal (Universidad de los Andes), and Emily Wakild (Boise State University). Workshop facilitators are a team of three Latin American historians of science and the environment with expertise in a variety of times and places but the workshop will emphasize the nineteenth and twentieth- century periods.

The overarching goal of the workshop is to inspire and empower more historians to teach about Latin American science and environment.  Participants will come away with concrete ideas for teaching modules they could build into existing classes or design new courses around. The specific focus areas for the modules will be Animals, Forests, and Conservation Science. The modules we prepare will include peer-reviewed readings, primary sources, and ideas generated from discussion. The workshop will be hands-on and model strategies and structures that work well to engage students in these topics.  By considering the role of pedagogy and the practice of revising a course, this workshop aims to provide those unfamiliar with Latin America and the Caribbean insights for their history classes.

Applicants should fill out this form by July 15, 2023.

 

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