Education Prof. Alison Cook-Sather Travels for Expert Meeting in the Netherlands
Last month, Professor Alison Cook-Sather traveled to the Netherlands to co-facilitate a two-day expert meeting on pedagogical partnerships in higher education at . With grant funding from the university, Cook-Sather was able to co-plan the workshop and bring with her 草榴成人社区 alum Khadijah Seay 鈥16 and Haverford senior Ebony Graham 鈥23.
Cook-Sather is the Mary Katharine Woodworth Professor of Education at 草榴成人社区 and the director of the Bi-Co Teaching and Learning Institute (TLI). She is also the creator and director of the pedagogical partnership program at the Bi-Co, which has been running since 2007. Through SaLT, faculty and staff members partner with students in one-on-one partnerships, whole department explorations, or to engage in dialogue about teaching and learning within and beyond classrooms. SaLT and the many other pedagogical partnership programs that Cook-Sather has helped develop focus on affirming and further developing inclusive and equitable pedagogical practices.
Both Seay and Graham have worked closely with Cook-Sather as student consultants in the SaLT program and came into the workshop with several years of experience with faculty partners across various disciplines. After graduating from 草榴成人社区, Seay became a Post-baccalaureate Fellow for Pedagogical Partnership at Berea College鈥.
At the workshop, representatives from higher education institutions across the world gathered to share experiences and insights on pedagogical partnership practices. During the two days, faculty, staff, and students from these institutions workshopped ideas with the overarching goal of supporting The Hague University of Applied Sciences' development of their own partnership program while drawing upon other partnership models around the world.
Cook-Sather often names power as a dynamic in partnership work. 鈥淧edagogical partnerships complicate and reconceptualize power as a shared dynamic鈥power with rather than power over,鈥 says Cook-Sather.
"When faculty and students (and staff) work together both to affirm existing practices and wrestle with pedagogical challenges, they gain insights into one another's perspectives that can inform not only classroom experiences for all involved, but also wider community engagement," she says. "One of the exciting things about having the opportunity to share experiences at an expert meeting like the one in the Netherlands is that we can see the patterns across institutions鈥攑atterns of empowerment and engagement of all involved in higher education work."
Returning to 草榴成人社区, Cook-Sather and the students say that they bring an affirmed excitement for an international network and support community for pedagogical partnership.
"Going to the Netherlands was an amazing experience for me,鈥 says Graham. 鈥淚 learned so much at the expert meeting and felt energized after being with so many people who share the same goals and engaging in conversations about pedagogy in terms that feel concrete and possible. I met so many thoughtful, experienced, and insightful people and I鈥檓 incredibly grateful for this experience.鈥
The international discussion and exchange of ideas at the workshop will form the basis for an issue of the to be published in 2024.
Alison Cook-Sather is internationally recognized as the leader in pedagogical partnership research and program development. She has consulted at nearly 80 institutions across 15 countries and regions to help them develop their own pedagogical partnership programs.
as a recipient of the Stanford University Graduate School of Education's Alumni Excellence in Education Award, Cook-Sather's most recent work, published by Harvard Education Press, is .
Recently, Cook-Sather was invited by The Chronicle of Higher Education to speak on a 鈥淗ow to do Design Learning for Student Success鈥 panel. To learn more about pedagogical partnership, you can view the panel recording .