Dr Joanna Kawalska

MA, PhD

School of Languages, Arts and Societies

Lecturer

j.kowalska@sheffield.ac.uk

Full contact details

Dr Joanna Kawalska
School of Languages, Arts and Societies
Jessop West
1 Upper Hanover Street
ºù«Ӱҵ
S3 7RA
Profile

I come from Upper Silesia (Katowice) where I first started my MA studies in Polish literature and language. I graduated in 2005 after defending a dissertation about overinterpretation of the texts based on Umberto Eco’s and Richard Rorty’s theories. In 2006, I finished an MA thesis about Imannuel Kant’s aesthetic theory.

In 2007, thanks to professor Jolanta Tambor, I started the adventure of teaching Polish as a foreign language. After training organized by the Polish Ministry of Higher Education I went for my first (in the role of teacher) summer school of Polish language in Chişinău in Moldova.

In 2007, I moved to Romania and taught Polish at University of Bucharest for two years. In 2010, I finished my PhD thesis about crisis of culture between 1918-1939 in Poland/Europe, origins of totalitarianism, banality of evil and conformism. Then I moved to Bratislava, Slovakia, and taught Polish at Komenský’s University until 2013. I came to ºù«Ӱҵ in September 2014.

Qualifications
  • MA Polish Literature and Language (Silesian University)
  • MA Philosophy (Silesian University)
  • Specialisation in Teaching Polish as a Foreign Language (Ministry of Higher Education, UMCS Lublin)
  • PhD (Silesian University)
Research interests

Although my PhD thesis was dedicated to literature and cultural theories, because of my everyday teaching duties, I have become more interested in language acquisition and philosophy of language.

I have recently prepared  for the students of Polish - a project funded by CEELBAS; I have participated in language teaching workshops at UCL; I have also been supporting teaching Polish as native/heritage language in the  and the .

I am interested in the history of World War II and the Jewish history in Poland. In ºù«Ӱҵ’s University Library, I have analysed authentic letters from 1944-1947 written by members of the Polish community in the UK. I have also written an article about Polish and Poles at the University of ºù«Ӱҵ.

Teaching activities

Polish language (in collaboration with Nina Szymor who is teaching grammar) and content courses at all levels

  • RUS123/124 Polish Language and Culture for Beginners
  • RUS350/351 Intermediate Polish
  • RUS383/384 Varieties of Written and Spoken Polish (include RUS210 Polish Heritage Track)
  • RUS130/131 Polish for All (evening course)
  • RUS123b/124b, 125/126 History of Eastern Europe (Polish stream)
  • RUS250/251 Polish Culture
  • RUS386 Project in Polish Studies (undergraduate dissertation)
  • MA supervision