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Biographical Sketch
Dr. Christie Time Firtha,
Ph.D.
I have taught Basic Writing, Composition and
Literature for more than nine years at both community colleges and
universities, and I completed my doctorate in English in June of
2006. My areas of specialization for my Master’s degree were
Victorian Literature and American Literature to 1900, and my areas
of specialization for my Ph.D. are American Literature to 1900,
Minority Discourses and Critical Theory (Language Theory).
I began teaching in 2000 as
a Teaching Assistant in the English Department at the
University of California,
Riverside, and I also worked in the Writing Center and as an
administrator/grader for the UC’s "Subject A" English placement
test. In 2001, I enrolled in the Inland Empire Faculty Internship
Program and began teaching Basic Writing and Composition as a
Part-time Instructor at Mount San Jacinto and Riverside community
colleges. In 2002, received recognition for my success as a TA at
UCR by being awarded the Flora Hewlett Foundation/ Honey Jordan
Stipend and Teaching Assistantship.
In addition to working directly with students in
the classroom, I highly value the extra-curricular academic
activities that a teaching position encourages. Since an essential
part of a college education is being involved in college
campus-life, I seek ways to engage students in activities around
campus. Four years ago, I served as a guest curator at the UCR/
California Museum of Photography, where I installed an exhibit which
addresses some of the racialized photographic conventions in late 19th
Century American photos and stereographs. Drawing on my previous
experience as chair of the annual, international Humanities Graduate
Student Conference at UCR, I organized a symposium specifically to
engage RCC, UCR, and local high school students in discussions about
diversity and the ways in which stereotypes are perpetuated. My goal
was to help students see some ‘real-world’ applications of the
lessons they learn in the classroom, while engaging them in social
issues pertinent to their lives. Also, since I am a firm believer in
the importance of outreach, having started my college career as a
socio-economically disadvantaged community college student who was
only inspired to attend college because of Grossmont Community
College’s outreach program, I involved local high school students in
the installation of the exhibit.
Statement of Teaching
Philosophy
My interest in teaching stems from my own positive experience as
an undergraduate and graduate student, and from my enduring love of
learning. I view my role as teacher as a sort of expedition
guide/mentor, where the teacher holds the knowledge of the route,
the challenges and the rewards, but all members of the learning
expedition (the class) are necessary contributors. And, thus, I view
the teacher-student relationship as a productive and collaborative
relationship, where teacher and students work together to facilitate
student learning.
Since I began teaching in 2000 at UC Riverside,
the 3rd most diverse public research university in the
country, I have found that one of the most important things I can do
to foster this sort of collaborative relationship as an instructor
is create a classroom environment where every student who enters my
classroom, no matter how large or small, feels like they belong,
they can participate, and they can succeed. I find this basic level
of hospitality creates a learning environment in which students can
ask questions and freely and respectfully contribute to class
discussions. Ideally, this sort of open discussion also creates an
environment where diverse and divergent points of view meet and are
explored; classes are best when students learn from each other as
well as me. I also find that this basic level of comfort allows me
to be learner-centered by leveraging my students’ diverse
experiences and helping them see how the matters we discuss in the
classroom apply to their own lives and futures.
My teaching philosophy includes my definition of
the college in which learning can occur. A college exists to provide
a safe, facilitative and supportive environment; a learning
community whose activities are shared by administrators, classified
employees, faculty and students. The college plans its curricula in
response to academic standards and the perceived needs of students
who can benefit educationally and economically. That is, the
students interact with and affect the function of the college and
vice versa; each can influence or change the other. This
reciprocally determined relationship is ever-evolving as the college
assesses student needs, and anticipates and plans for the future of
its diverse student body within its community.
Above all, I try to be very practical in my
approach to teaching. I try to keep students’ workload manageable
while still guiding them through the work to help them develop the
skill necessary to be successful in the class. I believe that
curricula and lesson plans must be developed in such a way that they
encourage student responsibility for their own success. I don't give
grades; students earn them within the structure and standards that I
design guided by the requirements of the academic institution or
college.
One of my most memorable lessons about becoming a
teacher occurred in my mid-teens when I began contemplating which
college I wanted to attend. When I asked my mother which college on
my list she thought would be best, she offered what I thought at
that point was a cynical response resulting from eighteen years of
on and off schooling. She said "oh, it doesn’t matter that much. A
college education is only partly about learning the curriculum.
Really, the most important things you’ll learn is how to figure it
out." After several years of college, graduate school, and teaching,
I have come to the grudging conclusion that mother was right—mostly
right, anyway. While I view a significant portion of my job as a
teacher is to teach the curriculum, I also want every student to be
successful, to understand what she/he is doing well and to develop a
necessary college skill, which is to learn how to overcome his/her’s
own challenges—to find out how to figure it out, to become
self-directed learners. It is important to me that students develop
skills that will help them analyze and interpret situations/texts/
problems outside of my classroom. My hope is that the knowledge I
disseminate and the skills I help students to develop will help them
become more aware of the ways they have been trained to think, the
way that social structures operate, and the beliefs that they have
taken for granted as "the way things are." Ultimately, one could
say, my hope is that students will develop a deeper understanding of
the way that language works, and specifically of how subtle
rhetorical manipulations of language can have lasting and tangible
effects.
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