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My Teaching

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Teaching is one of the most rewarding callings, for its aim is to guide people toward the acquisition of knowledge. Because teaching is an interactive process, students impart to teachers as much in the way of intellectual stimulation and human fellowship as they receive from them. As a result, the teacher is in the enviable position of being paid to learn.

I have found teaching history at UIC exciting. The range of courses I have been able to teach is broad indeed, from weekly independent study meetings with one, two, or three students, both undergraduate and graduate, to specialized undergraduate and graduate courses on Russian and Soviet history with enrollments of fifteen students, to sweeping survey courses on the European transformation of the world (HIST/INST 105) and on Russia in War and Revolution (HIST 137) with up to 300 students. The students I have had the pleasure to teach have ranged from history undergraduate majors and MA, MAT, and PhD candidates in history to a rich diversity of majors in my survey courses. The diversity of my students has also been great from the point of view of ethnic background, race, national origin, and stage in life. My students hale from dozens of different countries; many are full-time students, some take courses while plying a host of different professions and trades.

Naturally, I have tailored my pedagogical approach to the specific nature of each course. I generally structure my upper-level undergraduate courses and graduate courses in the form of colloquia, with an emphasis on the discussion of assigned texts in-class and the writing (and re-writing) of three to five short (4-6 pages) essays on assigned or agreed-upon topics. In most cases, the students present one or two oral reports to the class on their readings, which have in some courses depended more on student choice than on instructor assignment. In my survey of the Russian Revolution, students undertake primary-source research and write a 10 page term paper based on a topic of their choice. My discipline-specific goals in all of these courses are to help the students to acquire valuable knowledge about the past while developing their ability to think as historians, that is, to piece together an understanding of the past through a judicious, critical reading of historical literature and primary sources. Equally important to me as an educator is to aid my students to increase their facility for self-expression, both written and oral. As I often tell my students, there is little point in acquiring knowledge if one is unable to communicate what one has learned to others.

Overall, I have been grateful for the opportunity of taking part in the education of thousands of students at UIC. There are few more exhilarating feelings for a university professor than to witness the return of students to campus at the start of an academic year. It signals the yearly rebirth of the university, a rebirth the more welcome as the physical world is just then leaning toward its yearly decline.

 

E-Mail: daly@uic.edu

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HIST 105

Global Transformations and 

the Rise of the West Since 1000

Encounters and exchanges among world cultures have been the main driving force behind the extraordinary intellectual, scientific, and technological transformations of recent centuries. This course introduces students to the history of these exchanges and transformations during the past one thousand years, with an emphasis on explaining how Europe came to dominate the modern world. 

 

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HIST 137:

Russia in War and Revolution

There was no more world-changing event of the twentieth century than the Russian Revolution of 1917. It brought to power revolutionaries—the Bolsheviks—who nationalized all businesses, real estate, landed property, and financial assets. They repudiated traditional diplomacy and worked to abolish the free market. They legalized abortion, simplified divorce, and appointed the world’s first female ambassador and cabinet minister. They also launched a crusade against world capitalism.

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HIST 410:

Debating the Great Divergence, or did Europe Make the Modern World? 

The West gave birth to universities, constitutions, free-market capitalism, parliaments, civil and human rights, and the scientific revolution, — but also plantation slavery, world-wide imperialism, Communism and Nazism, two colossally ruinous world wars, and the Holocaust. This course aims to shed light on how all this came to be. 

Syllabus
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HIST/CEES 435:

Russian and Soviet Criminal Justice

During the past three centuries, criminal punishment regimes in Russia have softened dramatically. Until the late 1800s, Russia and Europe were following a similar path of penal reform. From the early 1900s, however, they diverged radically. This course will survey modern trends in criminality and penology in Russia, with a comparative perspective on Europe. Students will conduct independent research into topics of their choice.

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