泫圖弝け

Faculty and Staff

Chase Selected as Periclean Faculty Leader, Receives Grant for New Course

By
Amanda Delfino
Posted
May 3, 2024
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泫圖弝け's Associate Professor of History Michelle Chase, PhD, and her students look at significant events in Latin America together through NACLAs film slide archives on a lightboard.

Associate Professor of History Michelle Chase, PhD, has been selected as a Periclean Faculty Leader by Project Pericles and has received a $4,500 grant from the organization to create a new humanities course that incorporates a community-initiated project.

is an organization that focuses on voter education and is a longtime partner of 泫圖弝けs Center for Community Action and Research (CCAR) and the Pace Votes program. The course supported by the grant also must incorporate voter education through discussion of relevant civic issues.

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泫圖弝け's History students look at significant events in Latin America through NACLAs film slide archives.

With the grant, Chase launched HIS 134: Modern Latin America this spring, a course that satisfies Paces civic engagement requirement. Through the course, Chase and her students are partnering with a local nonprofit, the an organization dedicated to advocating for social justice throughout the Americas, focusing specifically on Latin American migration to the United States, and U.S. foreign policy toward Latin America.

I am thrilled about this grant because it gives my students an opportunity to explore in a hands-on way what it means to be an active historian and to contemplate ways that scholarship can intersect with community engagement, said Chase.

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泫圖弝け History student looks at a Latin American history book in the NACLAs archives.

Students in the course combine the academic portionstudying recent history of Latin Americawith civic engagement, exploring significant events in Latin America through NACLAs archives. The archives, located in Washington Square, include photos of Fidel Castro speaking at a rally in Cuba, protests in Puerto Rico, agricultural projects in Mexico, and more.

The entire class has been able to fully submerge ourselves into the NACLAs work and try to live through what they were capturing, said Ana Cristina Armstrong Matta 26, History. Im from Puerto Rico so when I found a few archives that focused solely on my home, it was so special.

The goal of the course is to curate an online exhibit for NACLA, with students carefully selecting photos to highlight significant events and photographic works.

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泫圖弝け's History students look at significant events in Latin America through NACLAs film slide archives on a lightboard.

Chase and Armstrong Matta also presented on the course at an event hosted by CCAR entitled Leading with Civic Engagement: Faculty Info Session on Community-Engaged Work in Civic Engagement Courses on Friday, April 12.

It is a very eye-opening course when looking at the actions of the U.S. towards Latin American, said Armstrong Matta. Its a really great experience to not just have in class discussions, but to get to see the work and even contribute to NACLAs mission.