David Goldstein

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Director of Teaching and Learning Center (TLC) and Senior Lecturer

B.A., English, University of California, Riverside
M.A., Communication, Stanford University
M.A., American Civilization, University of Pennsylvania
Ph.D., Comparative Culture, University of California, Irvine

Office: UW2-134C
Phone: 425.352.3578
Email: dgoldstein@uwb.edu
Website: http://faculty.washington.edu/davidgs/
Mailing: Box 358565, 18115 Campus Way NE, Bothell, WA 98011-8246

Teaching

Students teach themselves when provided the opportunity and motivation; my goal is to provide both. I seek not so much to change minds as to open them, and to teach lifelong critical and analytical skills rather than a set of facts. I rely on small-group exercises to develop students' abilities in teamwork and problem solving; rarely will they work in isolation. I also emphasize excellence in verbal and written communication.

I try to put students first; to use multiple, complementary pedagogical methods, including technology; to promote cooperation rather than competition in the classroom; to emphasize concepts rather than discrete facts; to remain flexible; to collaborate with colleagues in developing the most effective materials and methods; and to adapt to each student's and each class's particular constellation of skills and interests. I aim for an appreciation for complexity; our world is not simple. I am proud to be on a team of teachers who work hard to create educated, broad-thinking men and women.

Recent Courses Taught

http://faculty.washington.edu/davidgs/Currentcourses.html

Research/Scholarship

As an American and ethnic studies scholar, I work mostly with the writings of ethnic American authors in their historical and cultural context. I have published a co-authored book on race and ethnicity in American texts and articles on various Asian American and African American writers, and currently am working on two book projects. One is a reader-response study of the work of Nobel Prize winner Toni Morrison.  The other is a collection of documents that put Morrison's novel, Beloved, in historical and cultural context, which I am producing in collaboration with senior seminar students.

Selected Publications