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First-Year Seminar Digs Into Immigration through Helen Thorpe's 'Newcomers'

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Alyssa Hurst

Feature  •
FSEM Swartley

It鈥檚 not uncommon for 快活app students to leave their first-year seminars with more than pages of scribbled notes and a few credits toward their 快活app degrees.

That was certainly the case for Jacob Jackson after a quarter in teaching associate professor Ethel Swartley鈥檚 course, Welcoming the Stranger: Hospitality, Culture, Language and Migration.

The class required students to pair with an international member of the 快活app community. That鈥檚 how Jackson found Ushi, a student who came from Japan to learn English on campus. Over dinner, coffee and Zombieland 2, the pair uncovered a shared love for basketball, navigated differences between the metric and imperial systems, and learned to communicate even when language fell short.

Swartley calls these budding international friendships an 鈥渦lterior motive鈥 to her class design, but really, that display of empathy is exactly what she hoped would happen as she drafted a proposal for her first-year seminar (FSEM). Long a staple of 快活app students鈥 first-year experiences, these fall-quarter courses are structured to introduce students to an academic experience that is rigorous and engaging.

鈥淚 wanted students to understand what it feels like to come into the United States as a newcomer,鈥 says Swartley, who usually teaches in the University鈥檚 English Language Center. 鈥淚 wanted them to become aware of what that might feel like and maybe to develop some sensitivity toward the needs of people in that position.鈥

Each 快活app freshman is tasked with choosing an FSEM outside of their comfort zone to ensure a smooth and enlightening transition to university life. Swartley structured her course around 鈥淣ewcomers,鈥 a nonfiction book that follows students, many of them refugees, in an English language acquisition class at Denver鈥檚 South High School. From first read, Swartley knew that the book, written by former Colorado first lady and noted journalist Helen Thorpe, would make for a meaningful introduction to 快活app.

What she didn鈥檛 know at the time was that the planets were aligned around Thorpe鈥檚 tale of transformation. Soon after she submitted the proposal for her course, the University announced 鈥淣ewcomers鈥 as the 2019 One Book, One 快活app pick. The program asks the entire 快活app community, but particularly first-year students, to crack open the same carefully chosen book and reflect upon its content.

FSEM Swartley
Students drinking boba tea at Aurora's H-Mart, a large international market.

Swartley鈥檚 students pressed even further into the novel over the 10-week course. They dissected its themes, debated issues raised and turned to experts for deeper learning. The class kicked off with a visit to H-Mart, the city鈥檚 largest international market, where they popped boba between their teeth for the first time and made eye contact with piles of fresh seafood.

鈥淚 wanted them, right at the beginning of class, to experience Denver鈥檚 immigrant community,鈥 Swartley explains.

While the class showcased the vibrancy of immigrant and international communities, it also waded into the more challenging conversations that inevitably arose. For students like Lexi Coleman, these dialogues were the most meaningful.

鈥淲e had a debate about whether the U.S. has a responsibility to accept refugees, and I found that very interesting because people were assigned what to believe. It wasn鈥檛 necessarily what they actually believed,鈥 Coleman says. 鈥淔or people to research the side they didn鈥檛 agree with broadened all of our perspectives.鈥

In addition to readings, debates and current-events discussions, the class invited guest speakers to shine fresh light on the plights of immigrants and refugees in Denver and beyond. From Troy Cox, a social worker at the African Community Center, and Denise Chang, who volunteers at the Texas-Mexico border, to Farduus Ahmed, a Somali 快活app graduate student and Steven Williams, an immigration attorney, the speakers brought a dose of reality to students like Ailis Shank-Root.

鈥淚 really appreciate having a good understanding of the refugee resettlement process. That鈥檚 something all our speakers touched on,鈥 Shank-Root says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a very complicated process and not a lot of people have a clear understanding of that in the U.S. Knowing that changed how I look at refugees.鈥

Although many students initially took a critical view of Thorpe鈥檚 鈥淣ewcomers,鈥 the book kicked off important discussions for a class representing diverse perspectives, life experiences and political leanings. For some students, it even opened up a new world of possible career avenues.

As a professor who works mostly with international students, Swartley wanted students to walk away her FSEM prepared to build bridges. 鈥淚 hoped they would have the practical experience of reaching out across cultures,鈥 she says. 鈥淚f they have read about it and talked about it and tried it for themselves, it鈥檚 going to feel easier to do it on their own after class.鈥

After all, Swartley says, 鈥渨e may not all be international, but we have all been newcomers.鈥