Abstract

The article explores the connections between the seemingly dissimilar experiences of teaching required courses in Renaissance literature and literature by historically underrepresented authors. Both fields feature unfamiliar and challenging histories and texts. Moreover, the requirement itself, though necessary, is a constraint on autonomy that many students resent, which can impede their motivation to learn. Using research on intrinsic motivation and autonomy, we argue for giving students more opportunities to determine their own readings, assignments, and syllabi within these required classes.

Journal
Pedagogy
Published
2018-01-01
DOI
10.1215/15314200-4216914
Open Access
Closed

Citation Context

Cited by in this index (2)

  1. Pedagogy
  2. Pedagogy

Cites in this index (7)

  1. Pedagogy
  2. Pedagogy
  3. Pedagogy
  4. Pedagogy
  5. Pedagogy
Show all 7 →
  1. Pedagogy
  2. Pedagogy
Also cites 13 works outside this index ↓
  1. The Impact of an Undergraduate Diversity Course Requirement on Students’ Racial Views and…
    Journal of General Education  
  2. Teaching Shakespeare with YouTube
    English Journal  
  3. Teaching Shakespeare through Performance
    Shakespeare Quarterly  
  4. Strength through Cultural Diversity: Developing and Teaching a Diversity Course
    College Teaching  
  5. Changing Racial Prejudice through Diversity Education
    Journal of College Student Development  
  6. Participatory Rhetoric and the Teacher as Racial/Gendered Subject
    College English  
  7. Modeling Accentuation Effects: Enrolling in a Diversity Course and the Importance of Soci…
    Journal of Higher Education  
  8. Turning ‘Play’ into ‘Work’ and ‘Work’ into ‘Play’: Twenty-Five Years of Research on Intri…
  9. Teaching Shakespeare to Engineers
    English Journal  
  10. Pennebaker James Gosling Samuel Ferrell Jason . 2013. “Daily Online Testing in Large Classes: Boosting Colleg…
  11. Motivation and Self-Regulated Learning: Theory, Research, and Applications
  12. Direct Method Shakespeare
    Shakespeare Quarterly  
  13. Literary History and the Curriculum: How, What, and Why
    Profession  
CrossRef global citation count: 4 View in citation network →