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CHAPEL HILL PHILOSOPHY IN THE
COMMUNITY:
OUTREACH INITIATIVES
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Overview
Philosophical
activity contributes to a flourishing life by helping us to
develop a sense of ourselves and the world around us through
reflection on our beliefs and values. Our aim is to promote
philosophy in various parts of the community through seminars,
consultations, and targeted outreach initiatives.
The best way to understand and appreciate philosophical inquiry
is to engage in it. As we see it, philosophy is a contact
sport. Ludwig Wittgenstein put it this way: "Philosophy
is not a body of doctrine but an activity." The UNC-Chapel
Hill Philosophy Department is therefore engaged in an outreach
effort to promote the presence of philosophical activity in
the Triangle community.
Primary
and Secondary Schools (K-12) Initiatives
Young people are natural
philosophers; it is important to introduce them to philosophy when
their minds are still infused with an open, questioning spirit.
Therefore, we hope to work with administrators and teachers in area
public and private schools, to help bring the world of ideas into
primary and secondary level education. This initiative, begun in
late summer 2004, has already borne fruit.
The UNC-Chapel Hill Philosophy
Department has one main resource - people with experience
teaching philosophy. Here are some examples of past and present
Outreach collaborations:
Cary Academy:
During the 2005-2006
academic year we began facilitating philosophical discussion
groups in collaboration with the Cary Academy Philosophy Club
and Philosophy Club faculty sponsor, Donna Newell. On selected
Fridays we joined the club and interested faculty members
at Cary Academy for lunch. We discussed various topics over
pizza, including the problem of evil and the problem of free
will. This year (2006-2007), we are continuing this activity,
which we now call “phunch” (philosophy and lunch).
In addition, we plan to host a writing workshop with the club
this spring. Topics this year will include moral responsibility,
moral realism and anti-realism, and the nature of the mind.
Durham Academy:
With teacher Eric Teagarden,
we helped to construct a syllabus for a course called "Ethics:
Essay and Analysis" in 2006. This semester-long course
for second-semester seniors began with some work on critical
thinking and informal logic. The skills developed in that
section were then applied during the remainder of the course,
in which students explored various ethical theories through
consideration of some classic texts and ethical dilemmas.
Visitors to the class, including a police officer and an assistant
athletic director, presented real-world ethical problems of
various sorts. As a general introduction to philosophical
thinking, students also read the novel, Sophie's World,
by Jostein Gaarder. Our Department was involved in the classroom
by teaching the critical thinking section, and helping with
later portions on ethics.
This spring (2007),
we are teaching two sections of an "Introduction to Philosophy"
course. This course will introduce various branches of philosophy
through consideration of some classic and contemporary texts
ranging from works in metaphysics and the philosophy of mind
to ethics and political philosophy. Our Department developed
the curriculum for this course in collaboration with Mr. Teagarden.
We will be helping teach this course once a week for ten weeks.
McDougle Middle School:
With teacher Robin Johnston,
we developed a 'cluster' program for middle-schoolers, called
"Living the Good Life." Students explored and reflected
on beauty, health, fun, love, morality, spirituality and other
elements that might contribute to a full and flourishing life.
Among other activities, we visited an art museum, attended
a yoga class, and visited UNC Hospitals. The cluster program
took place every Friday afternoon for eight weeks in the spring
of 2005. Our Department was also involved in the in-class
teaching of this course.
During the Fall semesters
of 2005 and 2006, we developed and helped teach a "Philosophical
Values Debate" unit for the speech class at McDougle
Middle School in collaboration with teacher Chris Harkey.
After teaching the students the skills required for a Loncoln-Douglas
style debate, we assisted Ms. Harkey in developing philosophically
interesting topics and in arranging an inter-class debate
tournament. Topics included "the benefits of science"
and "the constitutionality of the right to bear arms."
We also modeled "good" and "bad" debates,
which were recorded for future use. We plan to continue this
project in the Fall of 2007.
New Century Charter High
School:
With teacher Bill Hoffman,
we developed a short course on ethics for the 2005-2006 academic
year. The course was designed to promote philosophical reflection
on values among high school students. Students focused mainly
on a series of thought experiments taken from the wonderful
"What If … Collected Thought Experiments in
Philosophy," by Peg Tittle.
This year (2006-2007),
we developed and are currently teaching four 5-week units
at New Century Charter High School in collaboration with the
school's director, Dr. Marcia Huth, and faculty members representing
various departments. the units are "Philosophy of Science,"
"Environmental Property Rights," and "Philosophy
of Mathematics." Each week we give a brief introductory
lecture and then facilitate a productive philosophical discussion.
East Chapel Hill High School:
In 2006, we began conducting
philosophy workshops with the East Chapel Hill High School
Lincoln-Douglas debate team. Two to three times a semester
we develop a brief introductory lecture and a discussion plan
directed at the topic the students are currently debating.
We then, with the help of the students, compare and contrast
the strengths and weaknesses of various competing theories.
Workshop topics have included "Theories of Justice"
and "The Right to Self-Defense."
North Carolina School
of Science and Mathematics (NCSSM):
Each year, NCSSM hosts
a one-day conference on ethics
and leadership. In 2004, four members of our
Department took part in the conference as facilitators of
discussion sections on a variety of ethical topics (including
euthanasia, affirmative action, abortion, and other topics).
PlayMakers Repertory Company
With support from the
UNC Parr Center for Ethics, we coordinated with the PlayMakers Repertory Company
to visit NCSSM and other area schools to discuss the moral
responsibility of scientists, as part of an educational effort
in conjunction with the production of Michael Frayn's play
Copenhagen.
C. A. Dillion Youth Development
Center:
In 2006, we began facilitating
discussion groups at the C.A. Dillon Youth Development Center
in collaboration with the Center's chaplain, Sandra McKeown.
Once a week for approximately eight weeks, we facilitated
discussions of classic philosophical problems, such as the
problem of free will and the Gettier problem. During the final
meeting of the group, we conducted a philosophy conference.
At the conference, group members presented their own ideas
and were asked questions and given comments by their peers.
We will facilitate two sections of this eight-week discussion
group starting in February of 2007.
Other projects are also in various
stages of completion. As these examples show, we are willing to be
involved in a variety of ways. We see ourselves as a resource to
educators; we try to work within constraints they set to help make
something positive happen in the classroom. Our involvement can be
minimal - as a sounding-board for ideas - or more significant - as
shown by the examples above.
Our outreach coordinators in
the past were Piers Turner
and Clair
Morrissey. This year our outreach coordinator
is Emily Kelahan.
Faculty Advisors are Geoffrey
Sayre-McCord and Jan Boxill. We are a part
of the Carolina Center for Public
Service.
Our outreach coordinator, Emily
Kelahan, will put teachers in touch with specialists who can
consult with them on theoretical issues or discuss practical
aspects of teaching philosophy. We can help teachers devise
lesson plans and classroom activities, or develop strategies
to promote critical debate and thoughtful discussion. We can
teach a short course on logical reasoning over a week; lead
group debates on ethical topics during a single class period;
discuss classic philosophical works or philosophical literature;
run role-playing games to elucidate themes from rational choice
theory; help students to reflect on scientific method and
the sources of knowledge, and more.
Philosophy can appear in a variety
of ways in a curriculum, even where you least expect it. Programs
can be put together for any number of issues, where philosophical
questions loom just below the surface.
Contact
Information
We very much welcome ideas for
how to expand and improve this initiative. If you have something
to suggest, or if you are a school administrator or teacher
with an interest in philosophy, please contact Cathay Liu. She
can be reached via email at cathay@email.unc.edu or phone at (919) 962-3329.
Useful
Links
1. The home page for the excellent
journal, Questions: Philosophy
for Young People. Two issues are available online.
2.The High
School Philosophy Website Project at the University
of Toronto. Teaching resources and links. In Ontario, philosophy
is a standard part of the secondary school curriculum.
3.The
Open Directory Project page for philosophy for
children. Links to many other sites.
4. Institute
for the Advancement of Philosophy for Children
(IAPC) A center at Monclair State University with a host of
resources, including subscription information for its journal,
Thinking: The Journal of Philosophy for Children.
These efforts are supported
by the UNC-Chapel Hill Philosophy Department, The Parr Center for Ethics,
and by Dr. Susan Wolf, Edna J. Koury Distinguished Professor
of Philosophy, as a result of her Distinguished Achievement
Award from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.
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