Making Sense: General Education in the 21st Century

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Making Sense General Education in the 21st Century

LACCD Faculty Academy May 9, 2014

Ken O’Donnell California State University

our students need college:

* to enjoy a full life

healthier less likely to smoke likelier to stay married likelier to start a business likelier to attend museums, festivals, live performances

agency

agency

agency

agency

“Lock-in”

our students need college:

* to enjoy a full life * to get a good job

healthier less likely to smoke likelier to stay married likelier to start a business likelier to attend museums, festivals, live performances

“Computerization has boosted demand for workers who perform “non-routine” tasks that complement the automated activities.

“At one end are so-called abstract tasks that require problem-solving, intuition, persuasion and creativity.

“On the other end are so-called manual tasks. Preparing a meal, driving a truck through city traffic or cleaning a hotel room present mind-bogglingly complex challenges for computers.”

“Computerization has boosted demand for workers who perform “non-routine” tasks that complement the automated activities.

“At one end are so-called abstract tasks that require problem-solving, intuition, persuasion and creativity.

“On the other end are so-called manual tasks. Preparing a meal, driving a truck through city traffic or cleaning a hotel room present mind-bogglingly complex challenges for computers.”

“Globalization is shipping white-collar work overseas, and powerful technologies are eliminating certain kinds of work altogether.”

The new kind of work will reward those who master:

design story

symphony empathy

play meaning

We held a series of meetings with agriculture, engineering, entertainment, biotech, teacher education, criminal justice, and tourism and hospitality.

No matter the industry, we found similarities in the skills they wanted from our graduates:

* Come ready to work the first day * Communicate and think critically * Work in teams * Use technology * Speak multiple languages and * Think and communicate globally

Charles B. Reed February 25, 2008

* Come ready to work the first day * Communicate and think critically * Work in teams * Use technology * Speak multiple languages and * Think and communicate globally

* Come ready to work the first day * Communicate and think critically * Work in teams * Use technology * Speak multiple languages and * Think and communicate globally

our students need college:

* to participate responsibly * to enjoy a full life * to get a good job

“Community engagement is

empowering precisely

because it’s not exactly

student-centered.

“It decenters the student,

placing the student as an

apprentice in a world not of

his or her own making—

and charging him or her to

intervene, powerfully and

humbly, to solve problems. David Scobey Executive Dean

New School

Student-Centered Curriculum

toward: full-spectrum learning interdisciplinarity agency versatility

from: under-preparation mobility frail commitment

fall 2006 cohort 2,803,472

67% never transferred

24% transferred

once

5% 3%

Source: National Student Clearinghouse Research Center

General Education Certification

English Communication A

Math & Quantitative Reasoning B4

Arts & Humanities C

Social Science D

Science (including lab) B1-3

Self-Development E

Sources of General Education (48 units total)

California State University (“receiving institution”)

nine upper-division units

certifying California Community College

(“sending institution”)

39 lower-division units

prior learning at the baccalaureate level

(“pass-along”)

* other CCCs or four-years * military and other training * external exams (AP or IB)

up to 39 units

hook

Unique Benefits of General Education

hook

Unique Benefits of General Education

reach

hook

Unique Benefits of General Education

reach employability

what we have what we want

reach hook

employability

alienation apathy attrition

46%

40%

23%

14%

Six-year graduation rates for full-time first-

time freshmen

Six-year transfer rates among

degree seekers

all students

all students

students of color

students of color

Student-Centered Curriculum

toward: full-spectrum learning interdisciplinarity agency versatility

from: under-preparation mobility frail commitment

0 0 1 1 2 2 Latino/a not Latino/a

38%

55% 49%

63% 65% 68% Source: CSU Northridge Institutional Research August, 2010

Graduation Rates by Ethnicity and participation in High-Impact Practices

November 1, 2013

Town Hall Meeting First-Year Persistence first-time full-time freshmen

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

Source: Institutional Research, CSU Chico

80% 74% 85% 80%

91% 93% 86% 84%

white students students of color

with Town Hall Meeting

Thia Wolf First-Year

Experience

Chico

William Loker Dean, Undergraduate Education

details and on-line toolkit: calstate.edu/engage

oral communication

written communication

quantitative reasoning critical thinking

lifelong learning

physical science

life science

science laboratory

arts or humanities

arts or humanities

arts or humanities

social science

social science

social science

cohort-based

learning community

peer mentoring

off-campus learning

The Campus as a

Living Lab

project premises:

-  collaboration: CSU with CCC and local business

-  Academic Affairs/ASCSU with Business and Finance

-  2013-14 implementation -  longer term NSF backing

William G. Thomas, Chair, History 2009 winner NSF & NEH

“Digging into Data” Challenge

digital humanities early childhood development

sustainable irrigation Grand Challenges

Ellen Weissinger Provost

Area A Area B Area C Area D Area E

globalization

social justice

sustainability

civic engagement civic engagement

July 9, 2013

“. . . state and federal grants and loans will shift more toward a performance-based and outcomes-based system than is the case today – and one that does more to reward innovation.”

Making Sense

diffusionoflight.wordpress.com

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