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"why try to define or label the work?"
“My Struggle” has set off a debate about which genre it properly belongs to. The original Norwegian version put the word “novel” on the title page, implying a certain distancing from the real events the book portrays, but that designation has been removed from the American edition, a decision that Mr. Knausgaard attributed to his American publisher, Archipelago Books.
“It was a conscious choice not to label the book for the reader,” Jill Schoolman, the founder of Archipelago, wrote in an e-mail. “I feel that ‘the project’ dwells comfortably between (and embraces both) fiction and memoir. (Aren’t they always inextricably entwined?) Why try to define or label the work?”
--from He Says a Lot, For a Norweigan. Books. The New York Times (June 18, 2012)

Break-out Group Discussion
Yellow Group:
Recruitment:
- Create a package (of information)
- Clarify what is common in network
- 'Market' at career fairs, try to collectively compete with TFA
- Encourage faculty to present teaching as option, plant idea early
- Video? market teaching when students choose major
- Hire undergrads as teaching assistants
- Make connections with science + math faculty
Sharing best practices for preparation+ induction:
- Where do we get resources?
- Website (?) for sharing ideas
- i.e. invite recent grads back to talk to undergrads
- look at CIRTL (Center for Integr. of Research Teaching and Learning)
- get list of grad websites resources
- how to choose/ support master/ clinical teachers
Preparing/ opportunities for teacher leadership:
- Invite new teachers to get together to share
- Building capacity for master teachers
Share resources:
- Summer program for contact specific pedagogy
Blue Group:
Challenges: