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AAC&U Network for Academic Renewal Conference , Facing the Divides: Diversity, Learning, and Pathways to Inclusive Excellence. Perspective-Taking, Learning, Social Responsibility: What the Research Reveals.
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AAC&U Network for Academic Renewal Conference,Facing the Divides: Diversity, Learning, and Pathways to Inclusive Excellence Perspective-Taking, Learning, Social Responsibility: What the Research Reveals Chad Anderson, Program Associate, Office of Diversity, Equity, and Global Initiatives; Caryn McTighe Musil, Senior Vice President for Diversity, Equity, and Global Initiatives; and Nancy O’Neill, Director of Integrative Programs and the LEAP Campus Action Network—all of AAC&U October 22, 2010
Session Goals • Highlight AAC&U’s national initiative, Core Commitments: Educating Students for Personal and Social Responsibility; • Share data on perspective-taking gleaned from national/multi-institutional studies; • Offer examples of promising campus practices designed to enhance perspective-taking; • Lift up promising practices from participants’ institutions; • Draft brief action plans for enhancing, scaling up, and/or assessing perspective-taking to take back to campus.
I. Overview of Core Commitments: Educating Students for Personal and Social Responsibility
The LEAP Essential Learning Outcomes Beginning in school, and continuing at successively higher levels across their college studies, students should prepare for twenty-first-century challenges by gaining: Knowledge of human cultures and the physical and natural world Intellectual and practical skills Personal and social responsibility Integrative learning
Five Dimensions of Personal and Social Responsibility • Striving for excellence: developing a strong work ethic and consciously doing one’s very best in all aspects of college; • Cultivating personal and academic integrity: recognizing and acting on a sense of honor, ranging from honesty in relationships to principled engagement with a formal academic honors code; • Contributing to a larger community: recognizing and acting on one’s responsibility to the educational community and the wider society, locally, nationally, and globally; • Taking seriously the perspectives of others: recognizing and acting on the obligation to inform one’s own judgment; engaging diverse and competing perspectives as a resource for learning, citizenship, and work; • Developing competence in ethical and moral reasoning and action: developing ethical and moral reasoning in ways that incorporate the other four responsibilities; using such reasoning in learning and in life.
Interrelated Strands of Work • Leadership consortium • Research and assessment • Presidential “Call to Action” • Amplifying activities with other campuses and the public • Weaving in new related initiatives • Generation of resources
Personal and Social Responsibility Inventory (PSRI) • Campus climate instrument • Surveys four constituent groups – students, faculty, academic administrators, and student affairs professionals – across the five dimensions of PSR • Gauges perceptions about opportunities for education for PSR across the institution – gives insight into institutional pervasiveness • Administered at 23 Leadership Consortium institutions in fall 2007
PSRI: “Should” vs. “Is” A gap exists between the aspiration and the actuality of the goal of helping students to take seriously the perspectives of others on campus. Source: Engaging Diverse Viewpoints: What Is the Campus Climate for Perspective-Taking? (2010)
PSRI: Perceptions of Student Behaviors Source: Engaging Diverse Viewpoints: What Is the Campus Climate for Perspective-Taking? (2010)
PSRI: Advocacy for Perspective-Taking Source: Engaging Diverse Viewpoints: What Is the Campus Climate for Perspective-Taking? (2010)
PSRI: Enhancing Activities Participation in community service is associated with student perceptions that the college experience promotes awareness of different perspectives. Source: Engaging Diverse Viewpoints: What Is the Campus Climate for Perspective-Taking? (2010)
PSRI: Enhancing Activities Interacting with faculty outside of class is associated with students’ beliefs that the college experience promotes awareness of different perspectives. Source: Engaging Diverse Viewpoints: What Is the Campus Climate for Perspective-Taking? (2010)
HERI: Enhancing Activities • When students interact frequently and meaningfully with peers of different racial/ethnic backgrounds than their own, they show greater likelihood of growth in pluralistic orientation, civic awareness, social agency, and habits of mind for lifelong learning. • HERI data also indicate that interactions with diverse peers can occur over general intellectual issues as well as over “diversity issues” (such as meaningful discussions about race/ethnicity). This indicates (a) a general benefit in having racially and ethnically diverse students engage in meaningful interactions and (b) a specific benefit in having racially and ethnically diverse students engage in meaningful interactions around diversity issues. Source: Higher Education Research Institute (HERI), UCLA (2009)
HERI: Enhancing Activities Source: Higher Education Research Institute (HERI), UCLA (2009), n=26,758
NSSE: Frequency of Activities Source: National Survey of Student Engagement (2009) – frequency distributions by Carnegie Classification
NSSE: Frequency of Activities “In your experience at your institution during the current school year…how often have you included diverse perspectives (different races, religions, genders, political beliefs, etc.) in class discussions or writing assignments?” (n=157,061) Source: National Survey of Student Engagement (2009) - senior grand frequencies by major
NSSE: Frequency of Activities “During the current school year…how often have you tried to better understand someone else’s view by imagining how an issue looks from his or her perspective?” (n=157,269) Source: National Survey of Student Engagement (2009) - senior grand frequencies by major
Promising Practices Example 1: Arcadia University’s “Global Connections Experience” requirement Students must study abroad, study away, or enroll in long-term, cross-cultural experience locally. Students reflect about their experiences, connecting theory and practice, leading them to deeply consider differing perspectives. PSR issues are pervasive across the curriculum, interdisciplinary, integrative learning, and experiential learning accessible to all students. Source: http://www.aacu.org/core_commitments/PromisingPractices.cfm
Promising Practices Example 2: Sacred Heart University’s “Common Core: The Human Journey” program The structure of core curriculum around “central, enduring” questions invites differing viewpoints from students and faculty across disciplines. Focus on large, global, complex questions creates cohesive yet interdisciplinary core curriculum. “Common Core” is interdisciplinary and institutionally pervasive. Source: http://www.aacu.org/core_commitments/PromisingPractices.cfm
Promising Practices Example 3: United States Air Force Academy, “Respect for Human Dignity” Outcome Outcome communicates to students that institution advocates for engaging diverse viewpoints. USAFA used previously established learning outcomes and institutional strengths to infuse the new outcomes into all four years. Collaboration across disciplines and offices to achieve goals. Outcome is woven throughout core curriculum and both military and academic programs. Source: http://www.aacu.org/core_commitments/leadershipconsortium.cfm
Table Discussion Describe three or four of your institution’s most effective specific curricular or co-curricular strategies/programs that are designed to encourage students to take seriously the perspectives of others as a resource for learning and for life? (Create collective list.) Where do these activities “sit” in your institution? (E.g., in specific academic departments, in student affairs, etc.)
Enhancing Opportunities Do students view these activities as central to the learning experience or disconnected from it? (Think about how campus leaders might strengthen the connection between perspective-taking and your institution’s core academic mission?) What percentage of the student body participates in these activities? (What might campus leaders do to scale up these activities?) What evidence exists that students’ perspective-taking is enhanced by these activities? (What might campus leaders do to begin to assess or improve perspective-taking?)
Resources For more information on the Core Commitments initiative, including examples of promising practices, tools, and publications, visit www.aacu.org/Core_Commitments To submit promising practices for possible inclusion in the Core Commitments resource bank, email Chad Anderson at anderson@aacu.org To contact Nancy O’Neill or Caryn McTighe Musil, email oneill@aacu.org or musil@aacu.org