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Liberal Education in a Global Century

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Office of Diversity, Equity & Global Initiatives ... (about others) moral discernment. Collaborating (with others) civic practice ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Liberal Education in a Global Century


1
Liberal Education in a Global Century
The Junior Faculty Development Program March 21,
2007
  • Caryn McTighe Musil, Senior Vice President
  • Office of Diversity, Equity Global
    Initiatives
  • Association of
    American Colleges Universities (AACU)

2
Association of American Colleges and Universities
(AACU)
  • Founded in 1915
  • Focuses on the quality, vitality, and public
    standing of undergraduate education
  • Committed to advancing liberal education to all
    students, regardless of academic specialization
  • 1100 colleges and universities are members

3
Liberal Education
  • A philosophy of education that empowers
    individuals, liberates the mind, cultivates
    intellectual judgments, and fosters ethical and
    social responsibility
  • By its nature, liberal learning is global and
    pluralistic. It embraces the diversity of ideas
    and experiences that characterize the social,
    natural, and intellectual world.

4
Greater Expectations A New Vision for Learning
as a Nation Goes to College (AACU, 2002)
  • To thrive in a complex, fast changing,
    interdependent but stratified world, college
    students in the 21st century need to be
  • Empowered
  • Informed
  • Responsible

5
The Challenge to Higher Education
  • Our world cannot survive one-fourth rich and
    three-fourths poor, half democratic and half
    authoritarian with oases of human development
    surrounded by deserts of human deprivation.
  • United Nations Human Development Report, 1994

6
Emerging Consensus
  • What colleges and universities agree are common
    capabilities needed in 21st century college
    graduates

7
The Essential Learning Outcomes for a Global
Century
  • 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

8
Essential Learning, One
  • Knowledge of Human Cultures and the Physical and
    Natural World
  • Through study in the sciences and mathematics,
    social sciences, humanities, histories,
    languages, and the arts
  • Focused by engagement with big questions, both
    contemporary and enduring

9
Essential Learning Two
  • Intellectual and Practical Skills, including
  • Inquiry and analysis
  • Critical and creative thinking
  • Written and oral communication
  • Quantitative literacy
  • Information literacy
  • Teamwork and problem solving
  • Practiced extensively, across the curriculum, in
    the context of progressively more challenging
    problems, projects, and standards for performance

10
Essential Learning Three
  • Personal and Social Responsibility
  • Civic knowledge and engagementlocal and global
  • Intercultural knowledge and competence
  • Ethical reasoning and action
  • Foundations and skills for lifelong learning
  • Anchored through active involvement with diverse
    communities and real-world challenges

11
Essential Learning Four
  • Integrative Learning, including
  • Synthesis and advanced accomplishment across
    general and specialized studies
  • Demonstrated through the application of
    knowledge, skills, and responsibilities to new
    settings and complex problems


12
Business Leaders Respond
  • What business leaders think of the value of these
    four pillars of undergraduate education.

13
Hart Survey Research of What Business Leaders
Value Most
  • Integrative learning
  • -The ability to apply knowledge and skills to
    real-world settings through internships or other
    hands-on experiences (73 more emphasis)

14
Hart Survey Research, 2
  • Knowledge of human cultures and the physical and
    natural world
  • - Concepts and new developments in science and
    technology (82)
  • - Global issues and developments and their
    implications for the future (72)
  • - The role of the United States in the world
    (60)
  • - Cultural values and traditions in America and
    other countries (53)

15
Hart Survey Research, 3
  • Intellectual and practical skills
  • -Teamwork skills and the ability to collaborate
    with others in diverse group settings (76)
  • -The ability to communicate orally and in writing
    (73)
  • -Critical thinking and analytical reasoning
    skills (73)
  • - The ability to locate, organize, and evaluate
    information from multiple sources (70)
  • - The ability to be innovative and think
    creatively (70)
  • - The ability to solve complex problems (64)
  • - The ability to work with numbers and understand
    statistics (60)

16
Hart Survey Research, 4
  • Personal and Social Responsibility
  • - Teamwork skills and the ability to collaborate
    with others in diverse group settings (76)
  • - Global issues and developments and their
    implications for the future (72)
  • - A sense of integrity and ethics (56)
  • - Cultural values and traditions in America and
    other countries (53)

17
What Students Expect from College
  • Students present a different view of their
    expectations of what colleges should provide.
  • The divergence is a significant challenge.

18
Top Tier outcomes of college education from
student focus groups
  • Maturity and ability to succeed on ones own
  • Time-management skills
  • Strong work habits
  • Self-discipline
  • Teamwork skills and ability to
  • get along with different types of people

19
Middle Tier Outcomes that Students Seek
  • Tangible business skills and specific
    expertise in field of focus
  • Critical thinking skills
  • Communication skills
  • Problem-solving skills and analytical
    ability
  • Exposure to business world
  • Leadership skills

20
Least Important Outcomes
  • Values, principles, ethics
  • Tolerance and respect for different cultural
    backgrounds
  • Competency in computer skills
  • Expanded cultural and global awareness and
    sensitivity
  • Civic responsibility and orientation toward
    public service

21
The Learning Power in Outcomes Named in the
Bottom Tier
  • There is mounting evidence that global,
    diversity, and civic learning combine to
    accelerate many of the capabilities that are
    necessary for a global century

22
Engaged Learning Across Differences andCivic
Learning For the Common Good
  • Critical thinking
  • (through others) intellectual skills
  • Connecting
  • (to others) intercultural skills
  • Caring
  • (about others) moral discernment
  • Collaborating
  • (with others) civic practice

23
Engaged Learning Across DifferencesandCivic
Learning for the Common Good
  • Require moving through the self to others
  • Require understanding interdependencies
  • Require dialogue
  • Require mindfulness
  • Require ethical sense of obligation and
    responsibility
  • Require practice and action in concert with others

24
Liberal Education and Americas Promise (LEAP)
  • AACUs LEAP initiative seeks to provide for all
    students the life-enhancing, socially responsible
    education that was once available only to the
    fortunate few.
  • In todays knowledge-fueled world, ensuring the
    most empowering forms of learning for all
    students should be our top educational priority.

25
LEAPs Principles of Excellence
  • Aim High and Make Excellence Inclusive
  • Give Students a Compass
  • Teach the Arts of Inquiry and Innovation
  • Engage the Big Questions
  • Connect Knowledge with Choices Action
  • Foster Civic, Intercultural, Ethical Learning
  • Assess Students Ability to Apply Learning to
    Complex Problems
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