麻豆传媒

 

Addicted to the classroom

Frank Harvey, Excellence in Teaching award winner

- May 28, 2012

Frank Harvey in his office. (Nick Pearce photo)
Frank Harvey in his office. (Nick Pearce photo)

Political Science Professor Frank Harvey, one of Canada鈥檚 top foreign policy thinkers, has won a few teaching awards during his twenty year career at 麻豆传媒. But this year, the winner of our top teaching award, the 麻豆传媒 Alumni Association Award for Excellence in Teaching, reveals what motivates him to become a better teacher.

鈥淚 have to tell you, one of the things that I think creates the foundation for better and better teaching is fear. I am typically worried about letting the students down.鈥

Every semester, he reads student comments and evaluation forms. He thrives off positive criticism and takes each suggestion to heart. All dedicated teachers do, he says. 聽

鈥淲e are all in the same boat. Every prof is basically in the same place, trying to improve,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he only way to improve is to make mistakes and to learn from those mistakes, and to get feedback. Over time, you get a sense of what works.鈥

One year, a class discussion might fall flat. The next year, talking over the same issue with different students, fascinating insights begin to bloom, he says.

So his lectures constantly evolve. He sweats historical details, removes points that didn鈥檛 work, labours to keep slides and videos up to date and regularly brings in guest lecturers who can offer first-hand stories from conflict zones like Afghanistan or Iraq.

Inspiring debates


Once, Dr. Harvey hosted the Israeli Ambassador to Canada and a representative from the Palestinian Authority. In his mind, there was no clearer way to expose the divisions and common ground shared in that part of the world. His students agreed.

鈥淚 can鈥檛 lecture that. You have to experience it through those speakers,鈥 he says.

Dr. Harvey designs his lectures on American foreign policy and international violence to generate debate.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 want to reinforce conventional wisdom and I don鈥檛 want to reinforce biases. I want students to open up, unpack the issues, see what they assume, look at the alternatives, and then make an informed judgment.鈥

When it all comes together and you connect with students through a lecture or seminar, there鈥檚 no better feeling in the world for a teacher, he says.

鈥淲hen you get that feeling, it鈥檚 self-reinforcing. You really get addicted to having a great class.鈥

And that high, Dr. Harvey says, might be his greatest motivator to work as hard as he does in a classroom.