Title: Learning Communities: LaGuardia Instructional Staff Meeting May 3, 2006
1Learning CommunitiesLaGuardia Instructional
Staff MeetingMay 3, 2006
- A Brief History Rationale
- Will Koolsbergen
- and Phyllis van Slyck
2Basic Definition
- A variety of approaches that link or cluster
classes during a given term, often around an
interdisciplinary theme, and enroll a common
cohort of students. - This represents an intentional restructuring of
students time, credit, and learning experiences
to build community and to foster more explicit
connections among students and their teachers and
among disciplines. Gabelnick, MacGregor,
Matthews, Smith
3Learning Communities respond to key academic
issues
- Mismatched expectationsstudents/faculty
- Inadequate interactionstudents/faculty
- Lack of coherence among courses
- Lack of resources for faculty development
- Student non-completion rate
- Growing complexity and interdependence of
problems we face
4What we Know about Learning Community Students
(AAHE 2000)
- Complete courses and persist at higher rates
- Succeed academically at higher rates
- Report higher degree of personal growth
- Report high to significant gains in
- Learning skills
- Content
- Ability to see other points of view
- Analytical skills
- Bond to collegiate institutions
- Develop into
- Active, responsible learners
- Community minded individuals
5The Experimental College, University of
Wisconsin Alexander Meiklejohn (1927)
- Predicted that narrow departments would make it
difficult to raise important interdisciplinary
issues - Fragmented nature of the curriculum would
frustrate committed teachers trying to create a
sense of deep engagement and community - Developed two-year interdisciplinary, team
taught, coordinated studies program - Theme democracyfifth century Athens to 20th
century America - Active learning, problem-based seminars living
learning environment for faculty and students
6The Experimental College, continued
- Course of study shall not be a series of
disconnected readings or separate topics whose
relations are left undetermined - To become intelligent is to use your mind in
such a way that connections are established - The mind must be given active work to do to
understand to deduce, to infer, to connect, to
understand a field in relation to a larger whole - Phrase communities of learners introduced
- Meiklejohn, Alexander. The Experimental College,
Chapter 5
7Educational Change in the 1960s
- Higher education doubles in size
- Community college system is born
- Cluster colleges are established at traditional
institutions - Non-traditional institutions are created
Hampshire, Marlborough, Reed, Antioch
8The Evergreen State College, 1969
- Licensed to create a whole new kind of
institution - Team taught integrated programs 12-16 credits
- No majors no faculty rank, no departments
instead evolving areas of study - Culture, Text and Language,Environmental
Studies,Expressive Arts,Native American and World
Indigenous Peoples' StudiesScientific
InquirySociety, Politics, Behavior and Change - Emphasis on interdisciplinary education, active
learning, connecting theory to practice
9Stonybrook, 1970 (Patrick HillPhilosophy
professor)
- Concerned about fragmentation of curriculum and
isolation of students - Promotes concept and term learning communities
- Developed federated learning communities
- Definition a group of students travel together
and study togethersometimes with faculty or
graduate mentor--like a small federationin
larger classes.
10LaGuardia Community College, 1971
- Innovative faculty wanted to work across
disciplines - mid 1970s Freedom Clusters were designed
freedom and seeing, freedom and listening,
freedom and speech - All liberal arts students took (and still take)
an introductory cluster of 12 credits expanded
to include l.a. science students - English Comp, Research Paper, two other liberal
arts /sciences courses - In the 1990s an integrated, team taught seminar
hour was added
11Vincent Tinto, Syracuse University,1990
- First large scale assessment of why students
leave college - Studied LaGuardia, Seattle Central CC and Univ of
Washington - Conclusion was that learning communities
addressed retention and success issues,
especially for first year and developmental
students - LaGuardias New Student House, for example,
demonstrated a 95 retention rate at end of first
and second years as contrasted to 20 retention
for basic skills students studying outside House
12Liberal Arts Clusters at LaGuardia--Example
- ENG 101 Composition
- ENG 103 The Research Paper
- HUP 101 Introduction to Philosophy
- HUC 170 Art of Theatre
- LIB 110 Integrated Hour
13Sample schedule for liberal arts cluster gods
and monsters Eng 101 m, th 100 315 Eng
103 t 100 315 Hup 101 M, t, th 1030
1130 Huc 170 w 915 1245 Lib 110 w 100
200
14Learning Community Pedagogy
- Derives from
- Deweys ideas about experience and reflection,
democracy and community (1890s-1930s), Piaget
assimilation-accomodation theory of learning
(1920s-1970s), Bruners constructivist learning
theory (1920s-1980s), and Vygotsky s situated
learning theory (1920s-1930s) - Constructivism, discovery learning--education
based on cognitive theory we construct ideas
based on current and past knowledge. - Knowledge is physically, symbolically and
socially constructeed constructed by learners who
are involved in active learning. - Also influenced by
- Donald Schon, 1973What are the characteristics
of effective learning? What demands are made on a
person who engages in this kind of learning?
Reflection in action - David A Kolb, 1975experiential learning
concrete experience observation and reflection,
conceptualization, testing in new situations
15Active Learning Strategies in Learning Communities
- Student-led seminars, debates, improvisations
- Problem-based learning (case studies)
- Critical thinking approaches (multiple
perspectives) - Collaborative projects and responses
- Service learning and field study
- Reflection and assessment occasions
- Faculty repositioning
- From the sage on the stage to the guide on the
side
16Core Practices in Learning Communities
- Communityfaculty student collaboration
academic social connections shared purpose
satisfaction - Active Learninglearning in social context
problem based learning students take
responsibility for learning team projects - Integrationcurricular coherence across
disciplines students construct meaning - Diversitylooking at issues from multiple
perspectives acknowledging and attending to
diverse learning styles - Reflection and Assessmentexamining prior
knowledge and assumptions identifying learning
outcomes how have you changed?
17Resources
- More than 600 institutions nationwide numerous
regional and national conferences - LaGuardia continues to be a national leader
- Washington Center lists more than 300 learning
communities http//learningcommons.evergreen.edu - LaGuardias learning community website
www.lagcc.cuny.edu/lc
18Resources
- Alexander Astin, What Matters in College Four
Critical Years Revisited, 1993 - Stephen J. Brookfield, Becoming a Critically
Reflective Teacher, 1996. - Parker Palmer, The Courage to Teach, 1998.
- Smith, Barbara Leigh et al. Learning Communities
Reforming Undergraduate Education, 2004 - John Tagg, The Learning Paradigm College, 2003