101 MW 2:00-3:15 Professor Jenn Fishman
Course Title: Writing Community Change
Course Description: In this course students earn WRIT and ESSV 2 credit while making history through hands-on research and writing for the 10th anniversary of Near West Side Partners (NWSP), a nonprofit organization anchored by 5 Milwaukee institutions, including Marquette.
Backstory: This spring NWSP will celebrate a decade of forging meaningful, productive and sustaining partnerships with individuals and groups in Milwaukeeâs âneighborhood of neighborhoods.â Geographically, the Near West Side is bounded by Highway 175, Interstates 94 and 43, Vliet Street, and Highland Boulevard. It includes Avenues West, Cold Spring Park, Concordia, Merrill Park, Martin Drive, Miller Valley, and The Valley/Piggsville. Home to approximately 30,000 people, this storied portion of the city of Milwaukee encompasses not only Marquetteâs campus but also headquarters for Aurora Health Care, Harley-Davidson, Molson Coors, and Potawatomi Ventures.
Opportunity: Since 2015, NWSP has developed a deep roster of successful programs and initiatives; however, NWSP has not developed parallel mechanisms for chronicling these efforts, and as a result much stands to be lost, starting with ephemera and first-hand accounts of participantsâ experiences. In the years to come, NWSP will prioritize the establishment of a formal archive and the implementation of related protocols for collecting, organizing, and sharing materials with relevant audiences, including community members, students, and scholars from across disciplines.
Contribution: To complement NWSPâs programmatic long-range efforts to establish an archive, students who take ENGL 2001 in Spring 2025 will pilot a mixed-methods multimodal approach to documenting NWSP history. After learning about NWSP and relevant writing research methods (Weeks 1-7), students will pitch and then conduct inquiry-based projects for the NWSP 10th anniversary celebration and/or the NWSP archive (weeks 8-15).
Specifically, students in this class will:
- Review extant materials to gain a sense of NWSP and its histories, both told and (as yet) untold.
- Learn methods of inquiry relevant to documenting an organizationâs history (e.g., bibliographic research, conducting interviews and focus groups, curating documents and artifacts).
- Pitch a project based on options offered by NWSP colleagues.
- Complete a project documenting NWSPâs past activities using two or more methods of inquiry.
- Report out via multimodal writing and presentations for the NWSP 10th anniversary and archive.
- Reflect regularly on course activities in relation to writing, researching, connecting with others, and working toward personal, civic, and professional goals.
In partnership: This course is a collaboration with Kelsey Otero, Senior Director of Community Engagement; Lindsey St. Arnold Bell, Executive Director of NWSP; Rana Altenburg, Associate Vice President of Public Affairs and President of NWSP; Tara Baillargeon, Dean of Raynor Library; and the Near West Side community members who accept our invitation to participate.
Who canâand shouldâenroll? Students of all years and majors are encouraged to take this course! The only prereq is ENGL 1001, HOPR 1955H, or an equivalent; no prior research experience or knowledge of NWSP is required.
Please note: As per the Registrar, this 3-unit course includes 2.5 weekly contact hours or face-to-face meetings plus up to 6 hours for course-related tasks, including (but not limited to) reading, research, and writing. Attendance and timely completion of assignments will be expected. Class projects will inviteâbut not requireâlocal, off-campus travel and collaborative work. All students should feel confident their needs, including ODS accommodations, can be met.