Linked Assignments
Linked Readings:
Baldwin’s “Sonny’s Blues”; “Cell One” by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie; “My Brooklyn” (film). NYC-based text deals with issues of history, place, race, and addiction – all themes that are covered in both classes.
Comp 1 Outcomes:
See below.
AMST Outcomes:
Engage with issues of identity, inequality and link to civic, individual and family life. Understand diverse perspectives and cultural / social identity.
Linked Assignment #1:
Analysis of photo essay.
Comp 1:
- writing in various genres and rhetorical contexts.
- Use reading and writing as a means to discover and revise ideas.
- Use the writing process to develop a writing project in multiple drafts.
- Locate, evaluate, and incorporate research materials into writing.
- Revise drafts based on feedback.
AMST:
Linked Assignment #2:
A walking tour of a NYC neighborhood draws upon lived experiences, themes of justice, identity, and investigation of how a neighborhood’s city culture and social dynamics participate in and seek to change political processes. Student voice, opinions, experiences, and creativity prized in this assignment.
Comp 1:
- writing in various genres and rhetorical contexts.
- Use reading and writing as a means to discover and revise ideas.
- Use the writing process to develop a writing project in multiple drafts.
- Locate, evaluate, and incorporate research materials into writing.
- Revise drafts based on feedback.
AMST:
- Build civic and sociopolitical awareness in one’s own life; facilitate thinking around neighborhood change and its relation to race, class, gender and other lenses of social inequality/injustice
- Incorporate qualitative and quantitative research into narratives and understandings about community/ society
Linked Experiential Learning:
Activity/New Jail
Comp 1:
- writing in various genres and rhetorical contexts.
- Use reading and writing as a means to discover and revise ideas.
- Use the writing process to develop a writing project in multiple drafts.
- Locate, evaluate, and incorporate research materials into writing.
- Revise drafts based on feedback.
AMST:
- Social analyses of everyday people to understand the impact of social and political processes
- Supplemental readings that examine racial and class dynamics of neighborhood change; supplemental texts on educational and neighborhood segregation; class and homework activities ask students to analyze quant trends to think about how the neighborhood and the city change demographically / structurally, and why.
- Supplemental reading about the resistance.
- To new jails; the unit will also draw upon statistics about incarceration, crime, inequality, and public funding and ask students to think about how quantitative/financial investment informs social outcomes
Culminating Activity/Paper/Project:
Activity/New Jail
Comp 1:
- writing in various genres and rhetorical contexts.
- Use reading and writing as a means to discover and revise ideas.
- Use the writing process to develop a writing project in multiple drafts.
- Locate, evaluate, and incorporate research materials into writing.
- Revise drafts based on feedback.
AMST:
- Presentation of excerpts from the walking tour project and oral history project
- Students will look to further investigate topics covered in AMST.

