Contemplative Curriculum Development
Summer Session
August 13-18, 2006
Smith College
Northampton, MA
The Center for Contemplative Mind in Society is pleased to announce a 6-day residential summer session on contemplative curriculum development. This will provide an opportunity for teachers in universities and colleges to research, prepare, and evaluate curricula that integrate contemplative practices into courses in any discipline.
Program Information
Participants will devote the week to rigorous investigation, reflection, writing, and discussion, guided by distinguished scholars and contemplative teachers who have already developed such courses.
There will be sessions on pedagogical issues, including the relation between course content and contemplative practice and the benefits of stabilized attention and other qualities of mind fostered by meditation, as well as on practical issues such as evaluation, grading, instructional techniques, and use of off-site facilities. We will also consider issues such as communicating course intent with colleagues and college administrators. There will be discussions on how contemplative practices in the curriculum are affecting teaching and learning nationwide. Local scholars and contemplative teachers not listed as faculty will visit and engage in the discussions . Each day will also include substantial contemplative practice time, which will introduce participants to practices from a variety of traditions as well as practices that have been adapted successfully for secular classroom settings. And each afternoon will be spent in workshops designed to aid participating academics in the design of a course well-suited to their disciplinary content and familiarity with meditation. The summer session aims to prepare participants to return to their classrooms with a deeper understanding of the practice of contemplative teaching and a fully developed course.
The summer session builds on the work of the Contemplative Practice Fellowship Program, administered by the American Council of Learned Societies and made possible by funding from the Fetzer Institute. These fellowships seek to restore and renew the critical contribution that contemplative practices can make to the life of teaching and scholarship. At the heart of the program is the belief that pedagogical and intellectual benefits will be discovered by bringing contemplative practice into the academy. While contemplative practices are part of all major religious and spiritual traditions, they have also had a place in intellectual and ethical inquiry, including secular educational environments. Contemplative practices are defined in a variety of ways, but they can be broadly understood as methods to develop concentration, deepen understanding and insight, and cultivate awareness and compassion.
We invite participants from the full range of disciplinary and inter-disciplinary perspectives in the arts, humanities, sciences, humanities-related sciences, and social sciences. We are especially interested in the development of courses in which classroom contemplative practices are related clearly to the content of the course itself. Such content-related contemplative practices can lead to genuine insights and deeper appreciation of the material under study.
The Summer Session will be held at Smith College in walking distance of downtown Northampton and easily accesible from major highways and routes.
The cost of the Summer Session is $530, which includes tuition, room, all meals, and a closing banquet.
How to Apply
The Summer Session is open to professors at two and four year colleges, universities and professional schools. Previous experience with contemplative practices is not required but can be helpful.
Deadline for applications is May 3rd, 2006.
To apply, download the application form.
The application is an interactive .pdf file that allows you to type directly on the form. Once you have filled it out, print the form and mail 2 copies to us along with:
1. Your most recent CV
2. A statement of interest, including a brief description of the course you would like to develop (1-3 pages acceptable length)
3. Your experience with contemplative practice, if any
Please note: if you cannot open the application form, you may need to install the Acrobat Reader software, which is available for free.
Mail 2 copies of the completed form and the three enclosures to:
Jennifer Akey
The Center for Contemplative Mind in Society
199 Main Street, Suite 3
Northampton, MA 01060
E-mail: jen@contemplativemind.org
Summer Session Faculty Includes
Arthur Zajonc, Professor
Physics Dept., Amherst College
Director of the Academic Program at the Center for Contemplative Mind in Society
Mirabai Bush, Director
the Center for Contemplative Mind in Society
Harold D. Roth*, Professor
Religious Studies & East Asian Studies, Brown University
Kat Vlahos, Assistant Professor
College of Architecture and Planning, University of Colorado, Denver
Joanna Ziegler , Professor
Visual Arts Dept., College of the Holy Cross
Other to be confirmed
*not yet confirmed
The Academic Guiding Committee
Sharon Daloz Parks
Associate Director, Whidbey Institute
Deborah Klimburg-Salter
Professor of Art History, University of Vienna
David Scott
Former Chancellor, University of Massachusetts at Amherst
Arthur Zajonc
Professor of Physics, Amherst College
Director of the Academic Program at The Center for Contemplative Mind in Society
Honorary Members
Brian Stock
Professor of Literature, University of Toronto
Steven Rockefeller
Professor Emeritus, Middlebury College
Robert A. F. Thurman
Professor of Indo-Tibetan Studies, Columbia University