Medieval studies prof Steven Bednarski wins teaching innovation award

Thursday, June 22, 2017

The line between research and teaching is intentionally blurred for Professor Steven Bednarski, whose students are as passionate about scholarship and dissemination as he is.

鈥淚 think 18 to 25 years-olds are at their creative peak,鈥 says Bednarski, 鈥淭he fun part of my job is that I get to tap into that energy.鈥

His ability to inspire curiosity and facilitate deep learning experiences has just been recognized with a 2017聽D2L Innovation Award in Teaching and Learning,聽presented this week by the Society for Teaching and Learning in Higher Education.

Steven Bednarski

Bednarski, who previously won a University of 蓝莓视频 Distinguished Teacher Award, is a social historian of late medieval crime, gender, and natural environment based in St. Jerome鈥檚 University at the University of 蓝莓视频, where he also co-directs the Medieval Studies program.

Over the past three years, his students have thrived in collaborative, cross-disciplinary, on-site and hands-on learning experiences at Herstmonceux Castle in East Sussex, UK. Supported by 聽a Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) grant, Bednarski has funded about 50 fieldwork trips to England since 2014. 鈥淔or many of the students, it was their first experience of internationalization,鈥 he says.

Herstmonceaux Castle

Herstmonceaux Castle in East Sussex is the site of a research and learning partnership between the聽University of 蓝莓视频, St. Jerome鈥檚 University, the Bader International Study Centre, and Queen鈥檚 University.聽

The primary focus on their work at the castle is archival and archeological research into聽climate adaption by medieval populations, given the topography around Herstmonceaux represents a microcosm of historical climate change. 鈥淲hen you get undergraduates to think about human responses to change in a far off historical period, they really can see more clearly how we react to nature today, how we shape nature, and how nature in turn shapes who we are as a species,鈥 says Bednarski.

In fact, studying climate change through the lens of medieval history has led many of his students to make other discoveries, which Bednarski is more than happy to encourage them to pursue.

students and Bednarski at castle

Professor Steven Bednarski聽(front, centre) with students at Herstmonceaux聽Castle.

This is the real benefit in sparking students鈥 interests and letting them explore their own research leads, he says. For example, 鈥淲e started the project thinking we had little written documents of the earliest castle history, but through persistent archival research by two students, we uncovered quite a lot of data to work with.鈥 Another student discovered the curious history of an illegitimate royal princess exiled to the castle, and this began a new research study into the site鈥檚 gendered spaces.

For many of Bednarski鈥檚 students, the Herstmonceaux experience ignited a desire to expand on their learning with creative dissemination. That resulted in an innovative student-run lab in St. Jerome鈥檚 known as the Medieval Digital Research Arts for Graphical and Environmental Networks (DRAGEN) Lab.

鈥淲hen we were planning the lab, I said: 'Okay, let鈥檚 say you have a $10K or $15K budget. What equipment would you want to have? What skills do you want to develop?' 鈥 The students researched and budgeted for items like the lab鈥檚 3D printer, gaming software, and digital wall 鈥 technologies that they wanted to learn to use.

鈥淪tudents are great for moving things along and finding new approaches for doing things that I wouldn鈥檛 have thought of. That鈥檚 how I benefit and learn from them鈥

Undergraduate and graduate participation in Bednarski鈥檚 research really began with the Poisoner book project, which Bednarski describes as written 鈥渋n the style of a gripping detective novel, yet grounded in rigorous academic research.鈥澛A Poisoned Past: The Life and Times of Margarida de Portu, a Fourteenth-Century Accused Poisoner聽is exemplary of microhistory 鈥 the study of an unusual historical 鈥渕oment鈥 or event related to ordinary people, in order to shine light on broader social contexts.

For the book, students helped to bring detailed medieval court documents to life by testing scenarios and perspectives through role-play and debates. Bednarski encouraged them to retell the complex narrative in simple and engaging language. Some of the students who study Latin helped with translation. One student created medieval-style illuminated drawings for the book. Another worked on the index.

students examine medieval script in lab

Students in the DRAGEN Lab examine medieval script.

鈥淚 lifted this idea blatantly from the sciences: where they work collaboratively in labs and write papers together,鈥 says Bednarski. 鈥淵ou get this rich collaboration that鈥檚 also training the next generation.鈥 The benefit of involving undergraduates in dissemination, he adds, is that they are not yet entrenched in academic language, making the research more accessible for a wider audience.

A 鈥渉uge asset鈥 in his work, says Bednarski, is having students with one foot in Arts and the other in another faculty, making their history projects more interdisciplinary. 鈥淚 want history students to take courses in other faculties and bring their knowledge and skills back to our work.鈥 And they do: students who run the DRAGEN Lab combine medieval studies with majors in environment or math, for example. Former students have gone on to become digital librarians, educational video game designers, public servants, writers, editors, and academics.


This story was聽originally published in 蓝莓视频 Stories.