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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2006
September
Course offers chance to learn
and earn college credits for free
Andrea
Lynn, Humanities Editor
217-333-2177; andreal@uiuc.edu
9/29/06
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Click
photo to enlarge |
Photo
by L. Brian Stauffer |
| Dale
Bauer, left, professor of English and of
gender and women's studies, and John Marsh, lecturer
in English, are two of the five humanities professors
involved in the C-U Odyssey Project, which offers one
year of free college-credit courses to women at the poverty
level in Champaign-Urbana. |
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CHAMPAIGN,
Ill. —
In a small public library not far from the University of Illinois campus,
talking is encouraged, and animated discussions not only are tolerated,
they are provoked.
In fact, the voices in the classroom, just a few steps from the circulation
desk, resound with the energy and excitement that comes from exploring
new intellectual worlds.
The Odyssey Project has come to Champaign – to the Douglass Branch
Library on the city’s north side – and from all reports,
it is a serendipitous voyage of discovery for the five teachers –
humanities professors at the U. of I., and for the 24 students –
all women, from age 18 to 72, most of whom have never had the opportunity
or the money to pursue higher education.
Qualifying
by virtue of their commitment to the course, of being at least 18 years
old and being able to read a newspaper in English, and of living at
or near the poverty line, the women are receiving a year of college
courses in the humanities for free. In addition to tuition, books, transportation
and even day-care services, those who complete the course will earn
six credit hours that can be transferred to the school of their choice.
For Sherri
Gillespie, 41, the odyssey program couldn’t have come at a better
time.
“It’s added a whole new element to my life – in fact,
it’s changed the dynamics of everything,” said Gillespie,
a single mother who had a year and a half of college some time ago but
who cannot work now because she is suffering from Behcet’s (pronounced
BAY-sets), a rare and chronic inflammatory disease that has her now
using crutches.
“Every once in a while you have to move the furniture around in
your living room,” Gillespie said. “I feel I have to do
that for my brain, too.”
There’s another reason Gillespie is making the effort to attend
classes two nights a week: “I strongly believe that going back
to college is a very good example to set for my teenage daughter.”
Buying into the Odyssey Project is, in fact, a personal test for Gillespie:
to see if her health could handle “getting back in the college
scene, adding some mental stimulation and adhering to a new routine
and schedule.”
For Keri Hogue, a single mother of 2- and 7-year olds and a full-time
employee at a local cap-and-gown factory, this was “the opportunity
of a lifetime, a blessing.” The classes are not only helping her
build her reading and writing and critical thinking skills, “but
also my self-esteem,” said Hogue, 24.
“This opportunity makes me feel like I’m doing everything
that I’m capable of doing. I’m able to take care of my kids.
I’m able to work. And I’m even able to say, ‘I have
class tonight.’ You know, that feels good.
“There’s just so much more I want out of life and for my
children, and this is helping me take the next step, preparing me for
when I’m ready to start college.”
At year’s end, the students will have taken four courses in the
humanities: literature and philosophy this semester, American history
and art history next semester, with critical thinking and writing spanning
both semesters.
The Illinois Humanities Council, with funding from the state and elsewhere,
is partially supporting the new Champaign-Urbana course and three
others in Chicago and Springfield. The C-U Odyssey Project is sponsored
by the Illinois
Program for Research in the Humanities, with substantial help
from the Chancellor’s
Office.
These programs and some 46 others nationwide, often with different names,
operate in partnership with the Bard College Clemente Course in the
Humanities, a unique educational program for low-income adults begun
in the early 1990s.
“This is a great thing,” said Dale Bauer, the Odyssey literature
professor and an expert in 19th- and 20th-century American literature.
“I’m proud to be part of it and proud that the Chancellor’s
Office is funding it.”
Bauer said she decided to teach in the Odyssey Project because she and
her brother were the first in their family to attend college, “so
I know how important it is intellectually and psychologically to go
to school.”
The wide range of ages among students in the Odyssey course is making
for a unique pedagogical experience, Bauer said.
For example, during a recent discussion of Zora Neale Hurston’s
short story “Sweat,” one of the oldest students in the class
immediately began drawing on her life experiences to interpret the story,
Bauer said. “Some of the other students were more tentative, but
grew bolder and more excited as we brought our lives into the discussion.
“These
sorts of discussions don’t happen as quickly in my campus classrooms.”
Bauer said she believes that the students see each other as “sources
of intellectual engagement and resources for their explorations into
literature.”
Gillespie described that discussion as “a fantastic conversation”
and Bauer as “a dynamic teacher.”
In the next few weeks, Bauer’s class will be reading Anne Lamott,
Tadeusz Borowski, Aristophanes and Shakespeare.
The other Odyssey professors are Rebecca Ginsburg, landscape
architecture; Debra Hawhee, English
and speech communication;
Mark Leff, history; and
John Marsh, English, assistant director of IPRH and coordinator of
the C-U Odyssey Project.
Marsh was the catalyst to bring the program to C-U. In the course of
doing research on the poems union workers wrote in the 1930s, he learned
how unions educated members, “not just in collective bargaining
or learning English, but in everything – the humanities, the arts.”
“I regretted that such things more or less no longer exist,”
Marsh said, “because every human being can benefit from learning
about their and their world’s history, what it means to be human,
to be mortal, ethical, disappointed, in love or out of love, in political
power or the object of it, in short, everything messy about being alive
that writers and artists and philosophers have been struggling with
for at least the last 2,500 years.
“Yet after high school, if there, even, many Americans, especially
low-income Americans or people beyond college-age, do not have the opportunity
to ask these questions and get what answers we as a collectivity have
found.”
Marsh believes the American university has become the default home of
the humanities, “and thus, is partly responsible for making them
available to all citizens.”
He said that when he found out about the Odyssey Project shortly after
he completed his poetry anthology, he was “extremely predisposed
to it.”
So are Hogue and Gillespie.
“Just being with U. of I. professors is exciting,” said
Hogue, who hopes to put her new skills and knowledge to practice in
the field of criminal justice.
As for Gillespie, an artist and papermaker who hopes to start a gift-card
business, the Odyssey experience is “just invaluable.”
Bauer, their literature professor, also has a few hopes regarding the
odyssey – “the greatest of which is that we will emerge
as a community of intellectuals at the end of the semester.”
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