@article{Mount_2018, place={Washington DC: American Sociological Association.}, title={Teaching in Unfamiliar Terrain: Empowering Student and Teacher Learning through a Photography Assignment.}, url={https://trails.asanet.org/article/view/teaching-in-unfamiliar-terrain-empowering-student}, abstractNote={This article addresses a challenge for sociologists who teach at institutions located in unfamiliar cultural contexts through a photo elicitation project to develop students’ sociological imaginations while teaching the instructor about students’ social contexts. In introductory courses, we must present sociology as a field of study that is relevant for students’ lives and teach students to connect their experiences with sociological perspectives. For instructors unfamiliar with the social context shaping their students’ experiences, this is a daunting task since we need an adequate understanding of students’ lives to effectively teach them. Based on my experience teaching an introductory sociology course in Kazakhstan, I suggest a semester-long project that combines photo elicitation with sociological analysis to (1) teach students to apply the sociological imagination to their own lives and (2) enable teachers to learn about students’ social contexts, thus making them better equipped at teaching students how to analyze their lives.}, journal={TRAILS: Teaching Resources and Innovations Library for Sociology}, author={Mount, Liz}, year={2018}, month={Mar.} }