Caribbean Educational Research Journal
Volume 5, Issue 1, April 2020, 68 - 84
* Corresponding Author (susanmcfarlane-alvarez@clayton.edu)
ISSN 1727-5512
Copyright © School of Education, The University of the West Indies Cave Hill (2020)
CARIBBEAN CREATIVITY IN THE NORTH AMERICAN CLASSROOM:
DEPLOYING DIFFERENCE AND INGENUITY FOR COMMUNITY-ENGAGED
PEDAGOGY
Susan McFarlane-Alvarez*
Clayton State University
Abstract: Since Fall 2013, students enrolled in Corporate Communication courses at Clayton
State University have learned about public relations and advertising through community-
engaged learning. Working in a mock student agency, formulated, named and administrated by
the students, this experience brings real-world clients into the classroom. Each semester, clients
include non-profit organizations or community start-ups, whose communication goals require
astute strategic thinking and some technological competence. Through autoethnographic
investigation, this paper describes how one professor’s professional background in Caribbean
advertising and public relations is brought to the benefit of North American students faced with
these challenges. The analysis asserts that students benefit specifically and tangibly from the
cultural flows from Trinidad and Tobago expressed through facets of personal, professional and
academic experiences. While perspectives imported from the Caribbean persuasion industries
help guide students in their development of grassroots campaigns, the more profound
pedagogical value of this cultural interrelationship includes the adaptation of sophisticated
communication strategies, appreciation of diversity within the experience, and the
manifestation of an interdisciplinary and transformative experience for both students and
community partners.
Keywords: Caribbean, pedagogy, creativity.
INTRODUCTION
Setting the Context: Caribbean Culture and Ambiguation
The flow of cultural and intellectual influence from the Caribbean to North America has
been documented extensively, through the analysis of such artefacts and phenomena as
food, music and entertainment, including Caribbean Carnival celebrations, from Caribana