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Collaboration, Technology and the Liberal Arts College. Michael Toler Rebecca Davis. Session Plan. NITLE Discussion: Defining Liberal Education Two NITLE Initiatives Sunoikisis Al-Musharaka Discussion: Technology and Liberal Education .
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Collaboration, Technology and the Liberal Arts College Michael Toler Rebecca Davis
Session Plan • NITLE • Discussion: Defining Liberal Education • Two NITLE Initiatives • Sunoikisis • Al-Musharaka • Discussion: Technology and Liberal Education
National Institute for Technology and Liberal Education • Advancing Liberal Education in the Digital Age • 3 Areas • Professional Development Opportunities • Collaborations • Exploring Emerging Technologies • www.nitle.org
What is “Liberal Education”? Discussion
What is “liberal education”? • Focused on developing thinking skills and inclination • Breadth and depth of knowledge, exploration, view • Creating a whole human being (not just vocational) • Tolerance for ambiguity and sense of interconnectedness of things • Developing range of human potential • Humanities, English, History • Explores values, cultural, individual, historical
What is “Liberal Education”? “a philosophy of education that empowers individuals with core knowledge and transferable skills and cultivates social responsibility and a strong sense of ethics and values” --AACU Website
Definitions Can Be Categorized • Curricular • Pedagogical • Democratic • Institutional • by Jo Ellen Parker, Exec. Dir., NITLE, from article forthcoming on • www.academiccommons.org/ • www.nitle.org
Curricular Approach • “the study of the liberal arts and sciences. . . . The idea here is that liberal education emphasizes “pure” rather than applied disciplines and requires familiarity with the major areas of intellectual achievement in the Western tradition.” 4 Definitions Application
Pedagogical Approach • “operating from a pedagogical methodology that emphasizes active learning, faculty/student collaboration, independent inquiry, and critical thinking. . . . and emphasizes the development of intellectual skills and capacities over the study of any specific materials or content areas.” 4 Definitions Application
Democratic Approach • “preparation for democratic citizenship and civic engagement . . . . the development of skills specifically believed to be central to effective citizenship -- literacy, numeracy, sometimes public speaking, scientific and statistical literacy, familiarity with social and political science, and critical thinking . . . . curricular engagement with current social and political issues alongside the extracurricular development of ethical reflection and socially responsible character traits in students” 4 Definitions Application
Institutional Approach • “a specific institutional type -- the small, residential, privately governed, bachelor’s granting college . . . . tends to emphasize structural characteristics and institutional settings as essential to liberal education . . . . residential community, small size, and undergraduate focus “ 4 Definitions Application
Two NITLE Initiatives Sunoikisis Al-Musharaka
Sunoikisis • A NITLE collaboration advancing teaching, curricular development and scholarship in Classical Studies sunoikisis.nitle.org • Began in the Associated Colleges of the South
Sunoikisis • Established Discipline • Needs of Small Departments • Interaction with more students and faculty • Wider faculty expertise • More course offerings
Sunoikisis Successes • Virtual Classics Department • Inter-Campus Collaborative Courses • Leverages individual courses into larger team taught course • Upper level languages • Summer Seminars
On All Campuses (online) Course Director Weekly common sessions in virtual classroom Online discussion Exams On Individual campuses Faculty Mentor Weekly tutorial meetings Control of grading Credit Hybrid Course Structure
Al-Musharaka • A NITLE Initiative in Arab, Islamic and Middle East Studies http://almusharaka.nitle.org • Began with Arab Culture and Civilization Site (ACC): http://arabworld.nitle.org/
Al-Musharaka • New discipline without established departments • Faculty from a variety of disciplines • Reaction to post 9/11 rise in interest in the MENA region
Al-Musharaka Successes • Inter-campus discussion on “Le Grand Voyage” • Semester length, inter-institutional, “Introduction to Islam” course • Creation of a virtual community of scholars-blog, listserv, online resources
Technology and Collaboration • Technology facilitates collaboration • Shared Resources • Communication • Expose students to multiplicity of expertise and perspectives • Presents disciplines in dialogue
Technology Challenges • Not face-to-face • Prefer paper and pencil • Concerns about the unknown & new • Students & Faculty • Technology • Mastering technology • Adapting teaching style
Applying the Definitions • Curricular • Pedagogical • Democratic • Institutional
Curricular • Sunoikisis-Classics in the origin of the artes liberales • The place of “Middle East Studies” in the liberal arts curriculum is an open question
Pedagogical • Sunoikisis ICCs allows students and faculty to interact in the virtual classroom • Al-Musharka Blog and listserv serve as vehicles for development and sharing of pedagogical resources, approaches, etc.
Democratic • Sunoikisis-Engages students in the larger classics community, acquaints students with the foundations of Western democracy • Al-Musharaka is a response to the context of the post 9/11 era
Institutional • Sunoikisis uses collaboration to compensate for small department size, allows colleges to maintain a meaningful commitment to the classics • Al-Musharaka provides resources to small colleges that would be challenged by this new subject area
Discussion: How might technology-assisted collaboration impact the liberal arts classroom? What are the benefits and challenges of technology for all four definitions of liberal education?
Discussion Index • Preserving Liberal Education • Collaboration and Technology • NITLE Initiatives • Sunoikisis Evaluation • Technology Challenges • Engagement • Technology vs. liberal education • Technology in support of liberal education
NITLE Initiatives • To what degree and in what manner do such initiatives advance the desired outcomes of liberal education? • Sunoikisis Evaluation • What other disciplines or areas might benefit from such collaboration? Back
Technology Challenges • How can both students and faculty be engaged across different campuses? • What benefits might be gained? Back
Technology Challenges • To what degree is technology assisted learning a departure from traditional liberal education practices? Back
Technology Challenges • How can technology support rather than compete with the values of small liberal arts colleges? Back
Technology Successes How can merging scholarly collaboration with technology advance liberal arts values? Back
What are essential characteristics of liberal education? What should we preserve? Back
Sunoikisis Evaluation • 3 year longitudinal study funded by The Mellon Foundation • http://www.sunoikisis.org/reports.htm • Executive Summary, Report and How-To Guide • Principal Investigators • Deborah Olsen, Virginia Tech • Susan Frost, Emory University Back
Evaluation Conclusions • “Both faculty and students clearly recognize the value the program brings, including new passion for the topic, broader range of expertise and intellectual stimulation, and collaboration among scholars and students about ideas.” Back
Evaluation Conclusions • “It is particularly striking that the program furthered a core goal of liberal education--teaching that engages students as individuals, builds the context they need to think critically about important questions, and encourages them to take responsibility for learning.” Back