Pedagogy of Listening Lab - Incite at Columbia University
Pedagogy of Listening Lab
- Participating Programs and Centers Columbia Oral History Master of Arts Columbia Masters Program in Narrative Medicine Columbia School of Social Work
- Contact Liza Zapol
- Funded by Columbia University's Office of the Provost
When thinking about the role of listening in education, we typically conceptualize teachers as speakers and students as listeners. However, scholars in several disciplines—including oral history, narrative medicine, and social work—have demonstrated that listening can have a much more complicated (and beneficial) role in pedagogy.
Directed by Liza Zapol, The Pedagogy of Listening: An Interdisciplinary Teaching Lab brings together faculty, researchers, and students from different disciplines at Columbia University to advance understandings of pedagogies of listening. In practice, this will include monthly meetings between faculty, fostering oral history exchanges with students and alumni, observing peer teaching, engaging in interdisciplinary discussions, and developing a pedagogical toolkit.
At the core of this lab is an understanding that teaching is an experiment in equality—not in the sense that teachers must forfeit their knowledge or authority, but that teachers can approach teaching from a place of mutuality and transparency. With this understanding, the lab will explore practices of listening that value the knowledge and experience of the learner and contribute to more inclusive teaching practices.
Since its founding, the Listening Lab has been awarded two additional grants from Columbia's Office of the Provost, enabling further expansion of the Lab's work.
The Dialogue Across Difference Seed Grant supported the Pedagogy of Listening Symposium in Fall 2024 for educators and students. Additionally, the Cross-Disciplinary Frontiers Courses at Columbia grant will fund a new course, Power, Justice, Praxis: Listening Across Difference, launching in Spring 2025. This course will explore the complexities of listening in relation to power, privilege, and personal identity, encouraging students to engage in practical listening labs.
Director and advisors
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go to the Liza Zapol page
Liza Zapol Director ebz2103@columbia.edu
Liza Zapol is an artist and oral historian who explores themes of creativity, memory, and place through sound, multimedia, and performance. She has worked with renowned institutions such as the Archives of American Art, Whitney Museum of American Art, and more. She has also taught and lectured on the intersection of oral history and art at Columbia University and The New School.
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go to the Sayantani DasGupta page
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go to the Ovita F. Williams page
Ovita F. Williams Advisor
Dr. Ovita Williams is an antiracist social worker committed to justice and facilitating critical conversations on intersecting identities. She has extensive experience in field education and clinical practice, and has authored a book on justice-based field education. Dr. Williams also conducts workshops on courageous dialogues and is involved in decolonizing social work curriculum at Columbia School of Social Work.
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Amy Starecheski Advisor
Amy Starecheski is a cultural anthropologist and oral historian who focuses on oral history in social movements and the politics of history and property in cities. She is the Director of the Oral History MA Program at Columbia University and leads several oral and public history projects.
Faculty
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Nicole Brittingham Furlonge
Dr. Nicole Brittingham Furlonge is professor of practice and executive director of the Klingenstein Center, Teachers College Columbia University. She is also an instructor in Narrative Medicine at Columbia University's medical school and co-founder of LEARNS Collaborative, a catalyst for human-centered strategic thinking and change-making in schools and other organizations.
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Suchitra Vijayan
Suchitra Vijayan is an essayist, lawyer, and photographer with a focus on oral history, state violence, and visual storytelling. She has written critically acclaimed books and her work has been featured in numerous publications. Additionally, she is an award-winning photographer and the founder of the Polis Project.
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Mary Sormanti
Mary Sormanti is an social worker with expertise in various areas such as serious illness, bereavement, and intimate partner violence. She has worked with organizations like the Open Society Institute and the National Institute of Mental Health. She currently works at the Center for Complicated Grief, supervising interns and participating in research projects.
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Mario de la Cruz
Mario de la Cruz is a Founding Editor of Intima: A Journal of Narrative Medicine and an Associate Director for Columbia University's Division of Narrative Medicine. He focuses on advancing narrative medicine education and addressing health inequities through visual and performance-based narratives.
Researchers and Students
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Sam Nash Researcher
Sam Nash holds a dual Bachelor of Arts degree in English and Education with honors from Brown University. Currently pursuing a graduate degree in Narrative Medicine at Columbia University, specializing in Disability Studies. Sam has worked for five years as an executive function specialist for students ages 4-22. Sam is also involved in disability advocacy and pedagogy. She serves on curriculum committees at various academic institutions and presents on accessible classroom design. Sam is currently collaborating with an architecture team to design sensory-inclusive playgrounds for children with learning disabilities.
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Saanya Advani Student
Saanya Advani is a second-year MSW candidate at Columbia University School of Social Work, specializing in contemporary social issues. She has a bachelor's degree in Criminal Justice from Michigan State University. Saanya is interning at the Action Lab for Social Justice and focuses on creating programs for BIPOC and economically underresourced students. Her interests include healing from violence, community organizing for social justice, and exploring intersecting oppressions. In her free time, she co-leads The SWEET Caucus, a student group prioritizing self-care and bonding at CSSW.
Related Works
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open website
Eve Glasberg, "How do you teach the art of listening?", Columbia News, February 17, 2025
Related News
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go to Pedagogy of Listening Lab expands programming with two grants
Pedagogy of Listening Lab expands programming with two grants
This week, we're proud to announce that the Listening Lab was awarded two grants from Columbia's Office of the Provost that will enable the Lab to expand its work of advancing understandings of pedagogies of listening.
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go to How do you teach listening?
How do you teach listening?
Scholars in several disciplines have demonstrated that listening can have a much more complicated (and beneficial) role in pedagogy.
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