Course Redesign, Belonging, and Teaching History at College with Dr. Amy Powers
Episode Description
What does it take to make a history course relevant to a nursing student, an accounting student, or someone training in auto technology? In this episode, Lauran Kerr-Heraly is joined by Amy Powers, Professor of History and Faculty Development Coordinator at Waubonsee Community College in Illinois, to talk about community college teaching and learning, course redesign, and what it genuinely means to serve students whose lives outside the classroom are complicated. Amy draws on over 25 years of experience and her involvement in the American Historical Association's History Gateways project to explain how she redesigned her introductory history courses to build relevance, belonging, and intellectual curiosity from the very first session.
You will come away from this conversation with concrete ideas you can apply straight away, whether you teach in a further education college in the UK or on a community college campus in the US. Amy and Lauran discuss how to balance rigor with flexibility for students juggling work, family, and study, why asking a good question is a teachable skill worth spending time on, and how metacognition has changed the way Amy approaches faculty development. The conversation is grounded, honest, and full of practical examples that transfer across disciplines and college education contexts.
What We Cover in This Episode
* 0:00 Amy Powers introduces her role at Waubonsee Community College and her recent move into faculty development, coordinating professional development for around four hundred full time and part time faculty across all disciplines.
* 5:20 Why community college is built around more than the individual student: how success for one learner ripples out to families, neighborhoods, and local industries, and why further education institutions in the UK share the same community mandate.
* 10:30 The History Gateways course redesign project: how Amy worked with the American Historical Association to rethink introductory history courses, and the assignment called Everything Has a History that asked students to connect the subject to their own chosen fields.
* 16:00 Balancing ambitious teaching and learning with the real pressures students face: why empathy first is not a lowering of standards, and how offering flexibility in assignment choice and deadlines keeps students engaged without reducing the rigor of the course.
* 23:57 Metacognition as innovative teaching practice: how Amy has introduced reflective assignments into her courses and why helping students understand how they learn has a lasting impact well beyond college education.
Links, Resources and Offers
American Historical Association [https://www.historians.org]
Waubonsee Community College [https://www.waubonsee.edu]
Free resources and newsletter: www.alteringcourse.com/podcast [https://www.alteringcourse.com/podcast]
Speaking engagements, coaching and executive function support: www.alteringcourse.com [https://www.alteringcourse.com/shop]
About Your Host
Dr. Lauran Kerr-Heraly is an award-winning educator and author who has dedicated her career to transforming lives through education. As a speaker and coach, she helps educators, leaders, and students build skills for creativity and success drawing on experience in American community colleges, British and international schools in England, and her current role as Quality and Innovation Lead in an English college. She shares a nerdy and adventurous life full of books, board games, and travels with her spouse, daughter, and dog.
Connect with Dr. Lauran Kerr-Heraly
* Website: www.alteringcourse.com [http://www.alteringcourse.com]
* Instagram: @altering.course [https://www.instagram.com/altering.course/]
* Lauran Kerr-Heraly, Ph.D. | LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/laurankerrheraly/]
About the Guest
Amy Powers is a Professor of History and Faculty Development Coordinator at Waubonsee Community College, just outside Chicago, where she has been teaching U.S. History, Western Civilization, and World History for over 25 years. She is passionate about the community college model and what it means for local students, families, and the wider community. You can find her at the links below.
LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/amy-powers-323230273/ ]
Website [https://www.waubonsee.edu/powers-dr-amy ]
Email: apowers@waubonsee.edu