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CONNECTING |
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The Cities Program |
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Examining
cities from a variety of interdisciplinary perspectives |
Last
semester, students in a course called “Twentieth-
Century Perspectives on
the City” did a research project based on census data for Hartford from
the 1940s to 2000. Their teacher, Andrew H. Walsh, associate director of the
Leonard E. Greenberg Center for the Study of Religion in Public Life, had
them focus on such areas as employment, housing, and education, and describe
trends in particular neighborhoods of the city—information that they
ultimately provided to the Center for Neighborhoods, a project of Trinity
College faculty, students, and administrative staff working in partnership
with United Connecticut Action for Neighborhoods (UCAN), community
organizations, and other local educational and research institutions to
provide support for neighborhood initiatives.
“It was a lot of number crunching,” says Katherine
N. Sullivan ’04, “but it was exciting because we were producing new data
that hadn’t been extracted before.”
The course is part of Trinity’s Cities Program, a nonmajor program that
examines cities past, present, and future from a variety of
interdisciplinary perspectives. The assignment is an example of how students
in the program use Hartford to test urban theory in light of urban reality.
Sullivan says that while the Cities Program exposes students to a number of
cities across time and cultures—from Ancient Rome to present-day New
York—“Hartford is always there as a basis of comparison.”
Associate Academic Dean J. Ronald Spencer, director of
the Cities Program, says it, like the College’s overall urban project, has
two elements: the study of cities in general and the use of Trinity’s home
city as a richly varied educational resource.
Modeled on Guided Studies and the Interdisciplinary Science Program
and begun in 1996, the program enrolls a select group of incoming
students—usually 25 to 30— in each entering class. Participants take a
sequence of six courses during the freshman and sophomore years and fulfill
a final requirement in the junior or senior year.
Building
an “intellectual and academic framework” for the study of cities The
course that gets the ball rolling is “Reckoning with Cities: Issues and
Insights,” taught by Anne F. Lundberg, director of the Internship Program.
Lundberg says the course examines “a broad sampling of the big issues
confronting cities today,” with segments on such topics as urban
education, urban culture, and revitalization. The course is designed to
“build an intellectual and academic framework” for the study of cities,
and Lundberg draws upon local resources for both the broad view and the
Hartford perspective. She has invited staff from the MegaCities Project, a
Trinity-based transnational network of city leaders and activists from
around the world, to speak on the topic of globalization. And a guest
speaker from the Antiquarian and Landmarks Society discussed the role of
tourism in the city. Students in the course are required to do a final
project on Hartford, often involving research at the Hartford Public Library
or other archives, and interviews with city officials. Last fall, Emily S.
Foote ’05, a cities enthusiast from a small town in Vermont, researched
welfare reform’s effects in Hartford. Three years ago, Rebecca J. Kanin
’02, an art history major from Washington, D.C., examined the history and
role of Constitution Plaza in the city.
Kanin, who became an art history major after taking
Associate Professor of Fine Arts Kathleen
A. Curran’s [pictured right] course on “The City as Built
Environment,” which focuses on the history of architecture and planning in
major European and American cities, says, “You take such a broad range of
classes that you can find your niche in the program.” The other courses
include “The City in History,” “The City Imagined: Visual and Literary
Representations of Urban Life,” and “Social Science Approaches to the
City.”
A
foundation for further study in a variety of fields
Dean Spencer notes that while some program participants
proceed to design their own majors in urban studies topics, others have used
the program as a foundation for further study in the social sciences,
architecture, and more. David J. Alexander ’03, who is a mentor for
first-year students in the program, found that the interdisciplinary
approach of the Cities Program was ideal preparation for his major in
political science and minor in legal studies. One of his favorite things
about mentoring is the fact that Cities Program students have such a broad
range of interests, he says.
The program’s final requirement can be fulfilled in a
variety of ways, including participating in CityTerm, which combines an
internship at a government office or other local agency with a seminar on
contemporary urban issues. Another option is to conduct an independent
research project in Hartford or in a foreign city while studying abroad.
Patricia Pelczar ’00, who is now a Ph.D. candidate in molecular
microbiology at Dartmouth College, combined her interest in human health and
cities by doing her final requirement on why tuberculosis, which has seen a
resurgence in many cities, has not been such a major problem in Hartford in
recent years. Lillian
Yu-en Moulton ’02 took advantage of Trinity’s Rome Campus to satisfy her
Cities Program final requirement, exploring fascism’s impact on Roman
architecture.
A model
program
Compared to the Guided Studies and Interdisciplinary
Science programs, the Cities Program is still young and still evolving. Dean
Spencer conjectures that the Cities curriculum may be revised in the future
to give students some elective choice and to take even fuller advantage of
Hartford as a multi-faceted educational resource. However, a recent
self-study, a student survey, and also anecdotal evidence suggest students
are enjoying and benefiting from the program. What’s more, Curran says
people elsewhere have taken notice, pointing out that “MIT is forming a
similar program using Trinity as a model.”
Kate Sullivan ”04, who expects to employ her Cities
Program experience at the Cape Town global site next year, says she has
spent her first two years at Trinity really delving into “a lot of tough
issues” from historical, sociological, anthropological, and cultural
perspectives. Ultimately, though, she says, “The program has shown me that
there is hope for cities.”
-- Leslie Virostek
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