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Instructor

Dean Wright

Instructor

Winter 2023 Update: Dean Wright

  • Winter 2021 Update
    There’s nothing like a pandemic to bring focus to your work. With no commute to campus and no time in my office to gossip with my office mates and no opportunities for after-school beers at The Black Cat, my focus was completely on my students — which is where it should be.
     
    I missed the serendipity that comes from in-person contacts with students in the classroom or during office hours on campus—the back-and-forth dialogue on ethical issues and those moments of blazing light that come when you make a breakthrough with a student on a research topic or the inverted pyramid.
     
    Teaching remotely forced me to rethink my approach. You can’t just take a syllabus crafted for in-person learning and slap it on a course you’re teaching via Zoom. I found that I was using my Zoom class sessions in JOUR 207 and JOUR 351 as places to reinforce the notion that my students and I were working together as a community of seekers. This seemed essential at a time of enforced isolation.
     
    Some things stayed the same. I make a point of always dressing for my Zoom class as I would for an in-person class. So, yes, sometimes a blazer and collared shirt, sometimes a cardigan. Of course, I wouldn’t wear sweatpants on campus, but I can on Zoom.
     
    I’m looking forward to being back on campus in the fall, assuming Gov. Inslee, President Randhawa and Dr. Fauci say it’s OK.
  • Winter 2022 Update

    I was so happy to return to face-to-face teaching, even if those student faces were half covered in masks.

    While Zoom made it possible for us to continue teaching journalism to our eager and hard-working students in the teeth of the pandemic, there’s no substitute for opportunities provided by a face-to-face experience.

    I was, for example, able to resume one of my favorite writing exercises in my J207 Newswriting class: The students take a tour of Western’s justly famous public art collection, led by Western Gallery Director Hafthor Yngvason, and then write a feature story about the experience. My students have told me for years that this is one of their favorite experiences in J207. Luckily, the weather cooperated and the students told me they were inspired by their exposure to the magnificent sculptures scattered around campus.

    My other favorite experience of the past year was the opportunity to do some consulting work with the Cascadia Daily News, a newly launched local 24-7 digital news operation that also plans a weekly print edition. Several Western journalism graduates are involved, including Executive Editor Ron Judd. Other full-time editors and reporters are more recent Journalism alumnae Jaya Flanary, Hailey Hoffman, Elizabeth Kayser and Hailey Palmer. Cascadia Daily News is also providing (paid!) internships for Western journalism students.

Vanessa Blackburn – Faculty Update George Erb – Faculty Update
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