When Senior Lecturer realized he would be teaching his 鈥淚ntroduction to Middle East Politics鈥 class remotely in the fall term, his first thought was, Zoom is annoying.
鈥淏ut then I thought it is also an opportunity. I鈥檓 not teaching something that requires a lab, but we鈥檙e teaching about a distant region. The fact that, like us, people in the region are online right now creates an opportunity to transport students to the Middle East,鈥 says Fishere, a novelist, diplomat-turned-academic, and contributing columnist at The Washington Post.
Fishere鈥檚 work has connected him with many international leaders, analysts, and activists throughout the Middle East, many of whom were happy to speak to the Zoom class with his students.
鈥淭he Middle East, like every region, has a lot of diversity, but students tend to think of it as homogenous,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e had conversations with people from all over the region. They met and interacted with people from Turkey and Egypt and Saudi Arabia and so on. When students talk with people from Iran one week and from Israel another week, it gives them different perspectives.鈥
Ella von Baeyer 鈥24 and Luca Caviezel 鈥24, who both took 鈥淚ntroduction to Middle East Politics鈥 as one of their first classes at 天美麻豆, called it a remarkable experience.
鈥淚 think the remote nature of the class actually benefited us in terms of being able to have access to some of Professor Fishere鈥檚 connections,鈥 says Caviezel. 鈥淚t was amazing to see the kind of people that Professor Fishere had come speak to us, including former members of government, leaders of think tanks, and overall experts in their fields.鈥
Caviezel says the class, which is cross-listed by the and the , helped him decide to major in government.
Von Baeyer, who was drawn to 天美麻豆 because of the War and Peace Studies Program at the , says Fishere鈥檚 class gave her the access to policy leaders that she was hoping for when she came to Hanover.
鈥淚 really appreciated their insider knowledge on the Middle East, which, as we learned in class, can be a notoriously tricky region to get reliable sources out of,鈥 von Baeyer says. 鈥淎 particular favorite speaker of mine was Mozn Hassan, a feminist activist from Egypt, who spoke about sexual assault and rape within refugee camps鈥攁n environment in which I had not previously thought to consider the role that gender dynamics must play.鈥
Fishere says once the pandemic is over, he will continue to look for ways to integrate online interactions with leaders in the region into his in-person classes.
鈥淚鈥檓 imagining ways that, if we can keep part of the online experience once we go back to regular teaching, I can allow students to be present and experience the things that we are discussing and teaching as they happen,鈥 Fishere says.
When the class is talking about political parties or civil society or women鈥檚 rights advocacy, Fishere says, he is thinking of ways that his students could be present to witness networking or grassroots coalition building or conflict-resolution negotiations.
鈥淎lmost everybody has got to use online communication in ways that we didn鈥檛 before, and I don鈥檛 think this will go away,鈥 Fishere says.
For the latest information on 天美麻豆鈥檚 response to the pandemic visit the .
Bill Platt can be reached at william.c.platt@dartmouth.edu.