Professor Crowfoot's 'last lecture' comes with homework

3/13/2008

Professor Jim Crowfoot: His 'last lecture' drew hundreds to Rackham Auditorium
Professor Jim Crowfoot: His 'last lecture'
drew hundreds to Rackham Auditorium.

By Kevin Merrill

Emeritus Professor Jim Crowfoot gave his "last lecture" Tuesday after receiving the 18th Annual Golden Apple Award, a student-bestowed honor recognizing great teaching. But Crowfoot got the last laugh: he sent everyone home with homework.

Students voted to give Crowfoot this year's award based on letters of support from current and former students he mentored during nearly 25 years of University service. Crowfoot taught for 10 years in the School of Natural Resources and Environment (SNRE) and led it for eight more as dean. Semi-retired today, he still teaches twice a year through the Michigan Community Scholars Program and the undergraduate-based Program in the Environment.

During his deanship, Crowfoot guided SNRE through perilous times and helped reestablish its value and place at the University. "That school of Natural Resources and Environment means everything to me," said Crowfoot, who also holds the title of emeritus dean.

True to his pedagogical philosophy that places great value on learner participation, Crowfoot's last lecture involved open-mic audience involvement and a 14-page handout with citations and future reading lists. The "last lecture" ceremony is a mainstay of the annual award, which is one of the highest teaching honors at the University í¢Ë†’ and the only one voted on exclusively by students.

His lecture centered on two themes: the need to teach all U-M students the concept of sustainability í¢Ë†’ whether defined in terms of spirituality or natural resources í¢Ë†’ and on embracing a community approach to learning, which is a byproduct of his professional and well-regarded work in conflict resolution.

"It's not only the substance that's important. It's the process," Crowfoot said about his philosophy to teaching. "Students aren't memory machines on a stick. That ability to learn is so incredibly important for our future."

He is the first emeritus professor to receive the award. "That proves that great teachers and their legacies never leave the University," said Andrew Bronstein, co-chair of SHOUT (Students Honoring Outstanding University Teaching), the group that conducts the voting and bestows the award.

Rosina M. Bierbaum, professor and SNRE dean, said the award was well-deserved.

"He is a man of incredible integrity who has served as a mentor, professor and scholar of sustainability and environmental justice for more than three decades and is still teaching undergraduate interdisciplinary seminars," Dean Bierbaum said. "Jim is a role model to us all."

Introducing Crowfoot was Mark Chesler, an emeritus professor of sociology and 40-year friend. "Jim has been a steadfast, non-violent warrior for social justice," Chesler said.

Fields of Study: 
Environmental Justice