Brooklyn Institute for Social Research explained

The Brooklyn Institute for Social Research
Location:New York City
Country:United States
Established:2011
Founder:Ajay Singh Chaudhary

Brooklyn Institute for Social Research (BISR), founded in 2012, is a non-profit interdisciplinary education and research institute based in New York City that offers university-style seminar classes, primarily in the humanities and social sciences, to adult learners.[1] Alongside classes, BISR supports public research, programs with labor, non-profit, and activist organizations, and independent scholarly work outside the university. BISR is not a traditional degree-granting educational institution; rather, students enroll on a per-course basis to learn about topics that interest them. BISR classes typically take place in the evenings in a variety of public spaces, including museums, bars, bookstores, and community spaces.

History

BISR was founded in 2012 by current executive director Ajay Singh Chaudhary.[2] As a doctoral candidate at Columbia's Institute for Comparative Literature and Society, Chaudhary conceived of BISR "as something of an alternative—for both students and professors—to our current higher education system."[3]

The institute's first faculty were fellow Columbia Ph.D. candidates Christine Smallwood, Abby Kluchin, and Michael Brent. The institute emphasizes "pedagogy and interdisciplinary work".[4]

The first course offered by BISR, in January 2012, was "Politics of the City", a study of ancient Greek political philosophy.[5] Other early courses included "Dreams and Hysteria: An Introduction to Freud", "Shocks and Phantasmagoria: Walter Benjamin and the Arcades Project", "Telegraphs, Pneumatic Tubes and Teleportation; Or, the Way We Communicate Now", "Philosophy and Film" and "Realism".

Side by side with its course offerings, BISR also runs a number of projects and programs. The Podcast for Social Research is "a forum for the school's staff to discuss books, films, current affairs, and other pressing concerns". Days of Learning offers an opportunity for students "to learn about a particular topic – like Melville and the literature of Wall Street or Hannah Arendt – with no required preparations."

From its founding in 2011 through the fall of 2015, it offered between 12 and 20 courses a year. Between 2015 and 2016, it offered 70 courses and enrolled 1,000 students. By mid-2016, BISR had 40 faculty members in total. In 2017, it offered over 85 classes in New York City alone.[6]

Campus

BISR classes typically take place in the evenings in a variety of public spaces, including museums, bars, bookstores, and community spaces.[7]

In recent years BISR has expanded and diversified its programming, offering sliding-scale courses across the Midwest through BISR Network, political education to labor and community groups through BISR Praxis, free courses to disadvantaged communities through Community Initiative, and discounted courses to public school teachers through Educator Access.

BISR currently holds courses in New York City, Philadelphia, as well as smaller centers in Michigan, Ohio, and Kentucky.[8]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Unorthodox Higher Ed in Boerum Hill . June 1, 2012 . . May 6, 2019.
  2. Web site: The back-room Walter Benjamin: The Brooklyn Institute for Social Research and its serious moonlight scholars . Jed . Lipinski . April 27, 2012 . . May 6, 2019.
  3. Almost Four Years In, the Brooklyn Institute for Social Research Graduates to the Next Level . Kristin . Iversen . September 24, 2015 . Brooklyn Magazine . May 6, 2019.
  4. Web site: Lessons for Academe From the Brooklyn Institute . Baker . Kelly J. . August 31, 2016 . . May 6, 2019.
  5. Beha . Christopher R. . March 30, 2012 . Bar Room U. . . May 6, 2019.
  6. Web site: BISR 2017 Year in Review . Brooklyn Institute for Social Research . May 6, 2019.
  7. Marantz . Andrew . July 30, 2012 . Night School . The New Yorker.
  8. Web site: The Brooklyn Institute for Social Research . Brumberg . Zoya . October 16, 2017 . Thinking in Public.