Abstract

This paper outlines the learning opportunities that emerged when international students acquiring English for Academic Purposes joined Canadian undergraduates fluent in English for an Introduction to Women’s and Gender Studies. Critical reflections provided by students, course facilitators, and the graduate student researcher were gathered through surveys, interviews, and focus groups that examined experiences of academic internationalization in feminist and language acquisition classrooms, co-designed to engage difference as a valuable resource in community and knowledge-building. Results included development of mutual mentoring relationships across a wide range of educational and cultural backgrounds; honing of international students’ English-language skills through structured, intentional learning opportunities with others fluent in English; deepening awareness of non-western and Indigenous contexts as sites of critical knowledge production; and evidence that international and local newcomers to university campuses have much to offer one another. For everyone involved, there were opportunities to reflect critically on both subject matter and pedagogies of community building; use accessible language to build connections; interrogate knowledge claims emerging from the many contexts that instructors and students brought with them into learning conversations; and practice collaborative knowledge-building by probing the effects of local and global power systems in the learning pathways of students, instructors and institutions.

Highlights

  • Dorothy Day (1897-1980), the prickly American prophetess who, along with Peter Maurin, founded the Catholic Worker movement, elicited, for many, this experience of prophetic discomfort. It is into this uneasy space that Patrick Jordan ventures with his pocket biography, Dorothy Day: Love in Action

  • Jordan is well-placed to write such a biography - he lived and worked with Day during the last 12 years of her life. His writing is steeped in the ethos of the Catholic Worker and filled with stories of direct encounters with the force for good that was Dorothy Day

  • Despite Day’s own candid revelations about her tumultuous early life – revelations she made in her only novel, The Eleventh Virgin, and which she later regretted – very little of Jordan’s biography deals with relationships beyond those with the Dorothy Day of the Catholic Worker

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Summary

Introduction

Dorothy Day: Love in Action by Patrick Jordan. Dorothy Day (1897-1980), the prickly American prophetess who, along with Peter Maurin, founded the Catholic Worker movement, elicited, for many, this experience of prophetic discomfort.

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