I just came from the penultimate session of a class I teach (facilitate, really) during which students complete the research and writing of their senior honors thesis. Today I listened to the seven students in my all-female class (the Magnificent Seven, as I’ve been calling them in my mind) give short presentations about their thesis research and post-graduation plans. These are students from majors as diverse as journalism, exercise science, and English/Spanish with teacher licensure, but they crossed disciplinary divides to convey their passion for their topics.
Earlier this afternoon, I served as a judge for five presentations (from history, English, and theology) that were part of our university’s Research Week competition. Yesterday, I was a moderator in a room of presenters from exercise science and sports management. Although the topics diverged widely, all the students, in spite of limitations in some of the presentations, showed a clear enthusiasm for their research and its implications in the real world.
On Tuesday, I watched my first master’s thesis student (i.e., the first student for whom I’ve served as thesis chair) defend her project, on moral maturity in the Harry Potter series, with flying colors. It was a delightful meeting not only because we shared cookies and baked apple bars, not only because all three committee members and (of course) the student herself were Harry Potter fans, but primarily because I got to see the culmination of over a year’s worth of work and my student’s relief as she realized that she knew her stuff really, really well. It was as if I could see her becoming an expert before my eyes.
Finally, three of my children’s lit students gave in-class presentations on nonfiction books yesterday, and four more will do so tomorrow. So I’ve spent most of this week listening to students talk. And although there’s a significant difference between a 10-minute undergrad class presentation and an hour-long master’s thesis defense, I love hearing students at any level talk about what they love, especially when they’ve done the work to know what they’re talking about. In fact, I love hearing people in general talk about what they love. Maybe we should all do more asking and listening–we might hear something really cool.