J-Term Core Field Colloquia

J-Term — A Distinctive Learning Experience

J-Term Core Field Colloquia are academically rigorous, full-time teaching and learning experiences that combine in-class learning with carefully curated co-curricular experiential learning outside of class. While the semester-long Core Colloquium grapple with complex issues and questions through a range of disciplines and contexts in a seminar-style classroom setting, the Core Field Colloquia enable a deep dive into a particular aspect of these challenges within a specific site or place. It is through these interdisciplinary Field Colloquia, exploring answers to the course’s big question through place, that students gain real-world exposure and cross-cultural insights into complex global issues.

Sample Fieldwork Assignments for J-Term Field Colloquia

All J-Term Field Colloquia must feature thirty hours of in-class instruction and twelve hours of a variety of experiential education, community-based learning, and fieldwork, with the fieldwork activities and related assignments cohesive within the course structure and indispensable for exploring a variety of answers to the colloquium’s core question.

This guide of sample fieldwork activities details how previous field colloquia successfully pursued answers to the course’s guiding question by:

  1. engaging in site-specific structured activity coupled with reflection before, during, and after the fieldwork, and 
  2. facilitating the critical connection between disciplinary theory and vocabulary and real-world context through integrating fieldwork activities into regular class discussions, readings, essays, and/or exams.

1. Research Assignments Grounded in Fieldwork

Fieldwork is experiential learning where students generate knowledge with their community context by observing, interviewing, inhabiting, gaining practical skills, and learning how a fieldsite is constructed as both place and object of study. These assignments require students to complete a structured activity with guided instruction and reflection before, during, or immediately after a field visit.

2. Interview Assignments

Interviews can elicit a life biography, request information, follow up on field observations or community activities, or gather qualitative data on viewpoints or opinions. Interviews can take place as conversations or formal meetings conducted one-on-one or in small groups: they build relationships and deepen student understanding of local perspectives and issues.

3. Simulations and Role-Playing Exercises

Assignments involving hypothetical scenarios, structured simulation learning, or debates practice critical thinking and advocacy from different perspectives.

4. Skills & Workshops

These assignments focus on applying course concepts to create professional-level content using media or data analysis tools, including assignments that apply academic learning to real-world community issues or policy development, as well as collaborative problem-solving where students work in teams to innovate site-specific projects.

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5. Creative Projects and Performances

Creative media, including audio, video, and written narrative as well as performance, allow students to process and communicate their fieldwork experiences and studies.