Learning Communities
These are examples of learning communities that have been offered recently and in the past.
Chicano Studies and Critical AnalysisCourses: This learning community focused on critically investigating the production and consumption of Chicano/a forms of culture/identity through examining Chicano/a culture and identity. Students worked to interpret the Chicano/a culture primarily through literature, but also through theater, poetry, art, film and music. This learning community also focused on the writing process of planning, revising and editing essays. Students learned to respond to Chicano/a literature and poetry through writing expository/ argumentative responses. Additionally, students gained research and appropriate documentation skills. |
Drawn to GeologyCourses: Uniting these two fascinating fields will provide students a much deeper understanding of both. Classroom and online work will help us develop our skills, and field trips will allow us to apply our skills using landscapes and outcrops. We’ll use field time to complete a geology and drawing notebook. We’ll also collect rocks and fossils in the field to use in classroom drawings and projects. The integration of these subjects will help us develop drawing skills while learning about local and regional geology. No drawing experience is necessary. |
Form and Function in NatureCourses: Students must enroll in both courses for a total of 10 credits. Form and Function in Nature combines Biology 217 Introduction to Ornithology and Art 110 Drawing 1 into a ten-credit class that integrates art and science. This field-oriented learning community will help students develop a deeper appreciation of the natural history in and around the Wenatchee Valley. Students will move between the lecture classroom, drawing studio, biology lab and field trips to prime bird-watching areas in the region. They will also keep field notebooks for observations about birds in the forms of writing, diagrams and drawings. No drawing experience is necessary. |
Northwest Nature Writing: Integrating Northwest Environments and WritingCourses: Students must enroll in both courses for a total of 10 credits (5 credits of Natural Sciences lab and 5 credits of either Humanities or Elective Requirements). The course will focus on various aspects of nature writing while in the field. The names and ecology of a number of plant and animal species will be learned and will provide the basis for writing assignments in poetry and fiction. The aesthetic and spiritual aspects of nature will also be discussed and written about. |