Rick Gooding

he/him/his
Associate Professor of Teaching and Chair, Masters in Children's Literature Program
phone 604 827 5834
location_on BuTo 426
Thematic Research Area
Education

University of Alberta|Dalhousie University



|BA, MA|PhD


About

Like most academics in UBC’s educational leadership stream, my working life is divided between teaching, research, educational leadership, and service. I did my graduate work on the eighteenth-century novel and later researched literary representations of disease in the eighteenth century before turning my attention to writing for the young.  I teach courses on Children’s and Young Adult Literature (ENGL 242 and ENGL 392), Restoration and Eighteenth-Century Literature (ENGL 351), second-year historical surveys (ENGL 220 and ENGL 221) and first-year writing and literature (ENGL 100). My research focuses on children’s and young adult fiction, and I’m especially interested in how contemporary writing for the young represents posthuman challenges to liberal humanist models of the self. My recent educational leadership has involved developing genre-theoretical approaches to writing instruction and supporting graduate-level instruction in children’s and young adult literature.


Teaching


Rick Gooding

he/him/his
Associate Professor of Teaching and Chair, Masters in Children's Literature Program
phone 604 827 5834
location_on BuTo 426
Thematic Research Area
Education

University of Alberta|Dalhousie University



|BA, MA|PhD


About

Like most academics in UBC’s educational leadership stream, my working life is divided between teaching, research, educational leadership, and service. I did my graduate work on the eighteenth-century novel and later researched literary representations of disease in the eighteenth century before turning my attention to writing for the young.  I teach courses on Children’s and Young Adult Literature (ENGL 242 and ENGL 392), Restoration and Eighteenth-Century Literature (ENGL 351), second-year historical surveys (ENGL 220 and ENGL 221) and first-year writing and literature (ENGL 100). My research focuses on children’s and young adult fiction, and I’m especially interested in how contemporary writing for the young represents posthuman challenges to liberal humanist models of the self. My recent educational leadership has involved developing genre-theoretical approaches to writing instruction and supporting graduate-level instruction in children’s and young adult literature.


Teaching


Rick Gooding

he/him/his
Associate Professor of Teaching and Chair, Masters in Children's Literature Program
phone 604 827 5834
location_on BuTo 426
Thematic Research Area
Education

University of Alberta|Dalhousie University



|BA, MA|PhD

About keyboard_arrow_down

Like most academics in UBC’s educational leadership stream, my working life is divided between teaching, research, educational leadership, and service. I did my graduate work on the eighteenth-century novel and later researched literary representations of disease in the eighteenth century before turning my attention to writing for the young.  I teach courses on Children’s and Young Adult Literature (ENGL 242 and ENGL 392), Restoration and Eighteenth-Century Literature (ENGL 351), second-year historical surveys (ENGL 220 and ENGL 221) and first-year writing and literature (ENGL 100). My research focuses on children’s and young adult fiction, and I’m especially interested in how contemporary writing for the young represents posthuman challenges to liberal humanist models of the self. My recent educational leadership has involved developing genre-theoretical approaches to writing instruction and supporting graduate-level instruction in children’s and young adult literature.

Teaching keyboard_arrow_down