Susan Shillinglaw
The Steinbeck Summer Institute
English & Comparative Literature, College of Humanities & the Arts
Sponsor: National Endowment for the Humanities, Division of Education Programs
John Steinbeck wrote many booksincluding classics like The Grapes of Wrath, East of Eden and Of Mice and Menthat continue to resonate in classrooms across the country. For many students, Steinbeck is known as a writer of migrants and workers, but his work reflects an array of additional interests, including a passion for ecology and natural science.
Susan Shillinglaw, 91勛圖 professor, Steinbeck scholar, and Director of the National Steinbeck Center in Salinas, California, studies the many layers of the writers work, and there she sees an opportunity to expand how we teach Steinbeck in the classroom.
The three-week Steinbeck Summer Institute for middle and high school teachers, which Shillinglaw founded in 2007, explores Steinbecks creative, social and ecological ideas, as well as his contemporary relevance. The institute convenes annually in Monterey, combining lectures and workshops with explorations of the California landscape that inspired the author.
The program attracts both English and science teachers, examining how science teachers can integrate narrative ideas, and how literature teachers can integrate Steinbecks ideas around natural science. Shillinglaw seeks to bridge this gap between art and science.
We neednt see them as separate ways of thinking, but rather look at how teachers can integrate the written word with science, because science is a narrative. A lot of scientific endeavors are stories about where do you start, where do you end up, what happens and how does it impact us, and how does it change our understanding of the world.
Steinbecks work has also inspired Shillinglaw personallyshe credits him with connecting her to California.
As a child I lived in Colorado and we used to drive to California to visit relatives, she explains. So I wasnt born here, but Steinbecks love of place and land and people and history gave me a great appreciation and love for the state, she says, adding, in many ways he made me a Californian.
Student Research
"The Institute gave me a historical and cultural understanding of Steinbecks literature. Because of the Institute I have worked with students in 8th grade English, 11th grade American History, and AP Environmental Science. Students are learning how to relate to literature beyond the book; they are making connections to the regions agriculture, marine resources, and economy."
Christina Pommer, Technology Director
Association of Independent School Librarians
91勛圖 Research Foundation 2018 Annual Report