Assistant Professor of Multi-Ethnic Literatures
English Department,
California State University, Sacramento
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CURRENT PROJECTS I am currently working with a partner at Indiana University, South Bend on a project that examines undergraduate research and scholarship at comprehensive state universities. This is a follow up on an article I wrote that is forthcoming, “‘Scholarship automatically reminds me of grant money’: Reconsidering and Revaluing Undergraduate Students and Scholarship.” I am also currently working on creating a new multi-ethnic literature course for the department.
PHILOSOPHY I approach my role as a professor and mentor with earnestness, passion, and delight. I admire and respect the versatility and capabilities of Sac State students; as a result, I am somewhat rigorous and demanding in expecting you to do your best work. I have been described by my students as "tough, but fair and committed to her students' success." My definition of success and my teaching goals are the same: to help you to build upon your existing skills and knowledge and to encourage you to refine and strengthen your intellectual abilities.
One of the primary ways that I work toward this goal is to adopt the Socratic method (minus the wine!): I'll ask you lots and lots of questions, building upon the responses that you give. This process will demand that you think more deeply, critically, and thoroughly about a subject. While this may be frustrating at first, students tell me repeatedly that they learn and retain information, methods, and concepts better when they have worked for them rather than having it served to them.
By modeling the process of critical thinking and investigation, I hope that you will learn to ask questions that will not lead to dead-ends in your thinking, but will help you expand your critical abilities. In other words, after seriously analyzing, examining, and studying a concept, theme, method, text, or process, you should rarely end up right where you started. Even if you end up with a similar conclusion to the one you began with, the analytical process should bring you more clarity on your position, shed more insight regarding contrasting viewpoints, and provide more evidence and support for your ideas.
In addition to teaching content material and critical thinking skills, I also try to model elements of organization and preparation that I believe are important to creating an environment of high expectations and fostering respect in student-teacher relationships. I work to ensure that lectures, assignments, and class discussions are well-prepared, relevant, and challenging for you. In addition to teaching traditional students, I am excited about cultivating intellectual growth opportunities for students who are less prepared for academic demands of the liberal arts model and may feel actively disenfranchised from higher education. Through teaching diverse students, I not only constantly reflect on ways to reach a diverse range of students, but these experiences reinforce my core beliefs about the importance of equal opportunity for and equal access to higher education. Thus, I work to make clear the connections among ideologies, culture, and political-economic stratification in the past and at the present. As I am myself a re-entering, minority student who was the first in my family to graduate from college, my commitment is more than philosophical; it is also personal. WHAT YOU CAN EXPECT FROM ME...
WHAT YOU CANNOT EXPECT FROM ME
As a graduate of California's public school and university system, I am well aware of the talents that students in the public education system possess as well as the numerous challenges you face. My commitment is to provide the highest caliber education for each of my students and to provide the necessary skills for each of you to reach your greatest potential. For examples of how undergraduate students who are challenged to engage in critical thinking skills, careful revision processes, and polished analytical skills can demonstrate their intellectual prowess, please click here.
Aside from the immediate goals of helping you refine your critical thinking, reading, and writing skills, my larger goal is to foster generations of scholars, teachers, and citizens who are intellectually curious, politically aware, and socially responsible. I hope you are as excited as I am as we take this intellectual journey together.
Advance Furlough Notice This year the CSU is suffering the most severe budget cuts in the history of the University. Our Administration is attempting to manage these cuts by increasing student fees and requiring employees to take unpaid furlough days. I am required to NOT work nine days a semester. This Notice is to help you plan your time with me accordingly. As a result the furloughs, I regret that I will completely unavailable on the following days during fall semester:
Please note that I must be completely unavailable, otherwise I could be officially reprimanded for "insubordination." I am not permitted to make up work that would normally be done on the furloughed day. So, if you email me on a furlough day, please email me again with the same message on the following day, so that it will not be "carried over" work. Other faculty may be willing to take this risk, but as junior faculty I simply cannot. Personal note: I think the combination of budget cuts, furloughs, and higher fees will have one of the most detrimental effects on education that I have ever seen in the 40 years that I've been in the California public education system, either as a student or as a faculty member. Furloughs will impact your education overtly (by having specific classes cancelled) or invisibly (by having your assignments silently disappear or readings shortened or other unannounced changes made to the course) and they will make it far more difficult for you to finish your degree program in a timely manner through cuts in course offerings. And, you all know what higher fees will do to your personal finances. Please write your elected public servants (representatives, senators, and governor) with your frustrations. You are a taxpayer and your voice should be heard. We, the faculty and staff, are not the ones who made the decisions that are now negatively impacting your education. We are, instead, merely the ones who are forced to implement these policies that we don't necessarily agree with. Please don't slay the messenger; instead, contact those who are making the decisions.
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English Department | California State University, Sacramento | 6000 J Street | Sacramento, CA 95819-6075 | leekeller@csus.edu
Hellen Lee-Keller takes full responsibility for the information posted on these website pages.
The information on this page represents that of Hellen Lee-Keller
and not that of California State University, Sacramento.
Last update
August 29, 2009
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