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This overview explores the infusion of quantitative literacy (QL) at Alverno College through courses designed to bridge math with different disciplines. Discover the benefits, challenges, and methods for sustaining this impactful program.
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The Alverno Story:QL in the Disciplines Sue Mente QuIRK/PKAL Workshop October 10 – 12, 2008
Overview of Session • Setting context • About Alverno College • QL Courses
Session overview Infusion of Quantitative Literacy • Getting off the ground • Administration • Faculty • Students • Sustaining the program • Faculty support • Training for faculty new • Monitoring Business Arts & Science Nursing Education
Setting Context • Alverno College • Demographics • Ability based curriculum • QL CoursesMath is a way to describe, analyze and understand our world. – M. Frankenstein
Explore This Scan pp. 63 - 67 Examining the poverty line and the supplement Yardstick of poverty needs fixing Review p. 68 The story behind the numbers Why would we ask faculty from across the disciplines to engage in this activity?
Reasons for engaging faculty • See a broader view of QL • See QL is different than “old math” • See connections to their disciplines • See own potential projection of attitude We asked for help with data/topics/articles. Why?
QL in the Disciplines • Further demonstration of QL • Limited graduation requirement (Shhhhhhhh) • Anecdotal external evidence • Transferability concernscontext in math vs. math in context
“Yesterday I read an article for Social Science that dealt with a lot of numbers like fractions, decimals and percents. I understood everything except the percents, which still confuse me. But I was proud of myself because I stopped and questioned the numbers to see what they really meant. It was weird to sit and question a social science paper.”
What do students say? • Survey of graduating seniors • See page 69 EXPLORE THIS Comments on our survey? What would you want to know? Generate some questions.
Administration Buy – in & Implications • Iron was hot • NSF grant $ • Needed to have specifics • Needed commitment from disciplines and general education
Faculty Buy – in • Set ground work first • Personal contact with key people • $NSF for Summer work time • Does this mean I’d have to teach math? • Some faculty have fears & forgotten skills(“To be honest, I skip the graphs in the text.”)
Defining QL as a common learning goal • Multidisciplinary team • Not more math • Characteristics that cross disciplinary boundaries • Elicit quantitative dimension of your discipline
Power of Criteria • Creates a picture of ability • Gives faculty language • Helps faculty expectations(can expect levels 1 & 2 in level 3) • See page 70 for Alverno criteria
Summer workshop • EXPLORE THIS See p. 71 opening activity #3 Why might this be effective for faculty? • Multidisciplinary groups • Modify an assignment/assessment
Sustaining the program • See page 72 for follow up questions and inservices • Training for faculty new to QL (we are weak here) • Monitoring for level of expectation
On-going monitoring • Collect sample assessments and activities • We would also be interested in your insights on whether your work with QL in the courses you teach for validation has influenced your teaching in other classes.
Re the question of teaching - I LOVE QUANT LIT!!!! It makes the students responsible to their daily studio time and also has them reflect upon how to apply this learning in their own future studio, art therapy or art ed situations. It has also made me much more verbal as a teacher. Before I used to just apply my technical responses to solve problems, now I find in demos that I list the possible reactions and solutions of materials as a component of anything that I present. The road to technical excellence is now less of a secret and physical problem solving and is now more of a discursive studio tactic.