乐播传媒入口

American Road Trip

Mar 30, 2018

When students enrolled in the new interdisciplinary course The Power of the American Journey, they expected to analyze the travels and experiences of others, through insightful readings of John Steinbeck鈥檚 Travels with Charley to Thoreau鈥檚 Walden, from Jack Kerouac鈥檚 On the Road to Blue Highways by William Least Heat-Moon.

What the students hadn鈥檛 anticipated was introspection and reflection on their own life journeys. But for Professors Will Freeman and Kesho Scott, that was one of the main goals for the co-taught American Studies Special Topics course.  

Nicole Arredondo 鈥19 chose the course because 鈥渁s a physics major, I don鈥檛 often get the opportunity to talk about topics regarding the human self. One of the main goals for the course was to be able to use the journeys that we were learning about and apply them to our own lives and experiences. This meant we had to be open and honest with ourselves and our classmates. Will and Kesho did an amazing job of creating a space where we felt comfortable sharing our stories as they shared their own.鈥

Inner and Outer Journeys

Freeman, associate professor of physical education and head men鈥檚 track and field and cross country coach, and Scott, associate professor of sociology, had both written earlier books about self-growth and personal philosophies. They found that as they collaborated to create the course, they also had 鈥渕ore in common spiritually and intellectually.鈥 Freeman and Scott both wanted 鈥渟tudents to know themselves in a productive way.鈥

Will Freeman and Kesho Scott stand in front of a bus
鈥淢y own journey to 乐播传媒入口 to teach social movements shaped me and changed my life,鈥 Scott says. 鈥淪o teaching about others鈥 journeys and shaping the American experience seemed natural to me. We wanted to tell students 鈥楧on鈥檛 wait until you get to be our age to reflect on your own journey.鈥欌

Class discussion was often initiated by students鈥 two-minute commercials about what they鈥檝e learned and experienced, a tool Scott uses called embodied learning. 鈥淲e helped students to ask 鈥楬ow is my education aligning with my journey? What is my inner voice and have I listened to it? What is the cost if I don鈥檛?鈥 Thematically, the course is about growing as a person.鈥

For Arredondo, this was 鈥渢he first course where, instead of learning about something outside of myself, I was forced to use what I was learning to look within. It gave me a better understanding of the people who have made a mark on American history, the people around me, and of myself.鈥

Also on the syllabus was a re-enactment of an underground railroad slave journey and a trip to Iowa鈥檚 Field of Dreams, the site where the baseball movie of the same name was filmed. Students also kept journals and gave presentations about how history and current events shape these journeys.

For art history major Jackson Schulte 鈥20, this mix of experiences made 鈥渢he class differ from every other course I've taken at 乐播传媒入口. We learned to be more cognizant of the ways in which different people make their way through America, participating in the same political and economic systems, yet the opportunities to navigate through it all vary so much.鈥

Planning a Road Trip

During the second half of the semester, students mapped a new American journey for Freeman, whose book The Quest was about a cross-country motorcycle trip he took with his son. Freeman will embark on Commencement Day 鈥 a driving trip through 48 contiguous states in 75 days. Working in pairs, students sought to differentiate each state, avoiding the beaten path and planning for Freeman to visit as many national parks, spiritual sites, and 鈥渦nique places鈥 as possible.  

Freeman encouraged students to 鈥渦se their intuition to guide the route and to continue to ask how the trip route intersects with American history, diversity, and spirituality.鈥 He adds, 鈥淭he students are sharing in the journey by sharing their journeys.鈥

During spring semester, independent study students will develop a website and blog about the trip, and during the summer a student will update Freeman鈥檚 daily blog and provide real time GPS of his journey progress. 

Freeman plans to use the trip to write a second book about what he sees and hears across the country.

Scott, too, says she has been 鈥渞e-invigorated by this course and the opportunity to look differently at our teaching. I want to thank the College for supporting us in developing this course to help students think about their own journeys and the American road trip because we are all descendants of travelers.鈥


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