Cultivating student agency and responsibility through peer-to-peer teaching

Authors

  • Angela D. Storey University of Louisville
  • Hannah Eckel-Sparrow University of Lousville
  • Henrietta K. Ransdell University of Louisville

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15173/ijsap.v5i1.4478

Keywords:

student agency, responsibility, peer education, anthropology

Abstract

This case study explores an eight-semester Peer Educator Program in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Louisville (Kentucky, USA) that trains undergraduates in teaching practices, crafts spaces of partnership, and expands learning within large general education courses. Peer educators self-select from any major and gain knowledge on lesson planning and facilitation, working in small groups to decide content, plan, and teach bonus sessions for introductory courses. We argue that peer-to-peer teaching reworks lines of responsibility within and around classrooms such that student agency is cultivated both for students engaged in partnership activities and those taught by student partners. Peer education thus becomes a hinge around which authority is shifted and the educational agency enacted in Students-as-Partners programs extended to wider student populations. The authors are two undergraduate peer educators and the faculty coordinator.

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Author Biographies

Angela D. Storey, University of Louisville

Assistant Professor, Department of Anthropology, University of Louisville

Hannah Eckel-Sparrow, University of Lousville

Undergraduate student, Department of Anthropology

Henrietta K. Ransdell, University of Louisville

Undergraduate student, Department of Anthropology

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Published

2021-05-07

How to Cite

Storey, A. D., Eckel-Sparrow, H., & Ransdell, H. K. (2021). Cultivating student agency and responsibility through peer-to-peer teaching. International Journal for Students As Partners, 5(1), 97–106. https://doi.org/10.15173/ijsap.v5i1.4478

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Section

Case Studies