Title: First Year Students: Development of the Whole Person
1First Year Students Development of the Whole
Person Why Bother? May 11, 2009A supported
and understood student becomes an engaged
student, an engaged student is a retained
student, a retained student with continued
support is a successful student.
- ACAD 101 NEW INSTRUCTOR TRAINING
- Frank Ardaiolo, Ed. D.
- Vice President for Student Life
- Winthrop University
22005 How College Affects Students (Vol.2) A
Third Decade of Research (1989-2002)
3What can we conclude about knowledge
acquisitionand cognitive growth?
- Significant between-college effects on knowledge
acquisition and cognitive growth are inconsistent
and, when found, quite modest in magnitude. - Learning and cognitive growth during college is
due much more to within-college academic and
nonacademic experiences than to the
characteristics of the college attended.
(Pascarella Terenzini, 2005)
4Developmental Theories of Student Change
- Psychosocial development, including identity
formation theories focus on content of
development, e.g., vectors identity statuses,
dimensions (Erickson, Chickering) - Cognitive-structural theories seek to describe
nature processes of change (Piaget, Perry,
Kohlberg, Gilligan) - Typological models categorize individuals
according to distinctive characteristics (Kolb,
Holland, Briggs) - Person-environment interaction theories models
focus on environment that influences behavior of
individual (Astin, Kuh)
5CHICKERINGs VECTORS OF DEVELOPMENT in EDUCATION
AND IDENTITY
- DEVELOPING COMPETENCE INTELLECTUAL COMPETENCE,
SOCIAL COMPETENCE, AND PHYSICAL AND MANUAL
COMPETENCE - MANAGING EMOTIONS THE INCREASING AWARENESS OF
ONES FEELINGS WHICH MUST BE INTEGRATED WITH
ONES ACTIONS IN ORDER TO ALLOW FLEXIBLE CONTROL
AND EXPRESSION - MOVING THROUGH AUTONOMY TOWARD INTERDEPENDENCE
ESTABLISHING EMOTIONAL INDEPENDENCE FREE OF
CONTINUAL AND PRESSING NEEDS OF REASSURANCE,
AFFECTION OR APPROVAL - ESTABLISHING IDENTITY REFERS TO A CLEAR
SELF-CONCEPT AND COMFORT WITH THE SELF OR PERSON
ONE FEELS ONESELF TO BE
6CHICKERINGs VECTORS OF DEVELOPMENT in EDUCATION
AND IDENTITY (2nd ed., 1993)
- DEVELOPING MATURE INTERPERSONAL RELATIONSHIPS
INVOLVES INCREASED TOLERANCE, ACCEPTANCE AND
APPRECIATION OF DIFFERENCES BETWEEN INDIVIDUALS
AND THEIR CULTURAL DIFFERENCES WITH INCREASED
CAPACITY FOR MATURE RELATIONSHIPS BASED UPON
GREATER TRUST, INDEPENDENCE, AND INDIVIDUALITY - DEVELOPING PURPOSE THE ASSESSMENT AND
CLARIFICATIONS OF ONES INTERESTS, EDUCATION AND
CAREER OPTIONS, AND LIFE-STYLE PREFERENCE - DEVELOPING INTEGRITY THE DEVELOPMENT OF A
DEFINED AND INTERNALLY CONSISTENT SET OF VALUES
THAT GUIDE ONES ACTIONS
7Students out-of-class interactions with peers
and the nature of their extra-curricular
experience Important implications for
cognitive growth learning
- Extend and reinforce the ethos of the
academic program - Expose one to people, ideas, and perspectives
that challenge assumed views of the world - Importance of student affairs professionals
- (Pascarella Terenzini, 2005)
8Physical Presence BUT Psychological Absence on
Campus!
- Many students systematically fail to recognize
the value of learning - What we can say with fair confidence at this
point is that most students who leave high school
and enter college bring with them a set of
attitudes and beliefs about schooling and their
interaction with educational institutions that
tend to insulate them against learning rather
than to prepare them for it p.47. - J. Tagg (2003), The learning paradigm college.
Bolton, MA Anker
9Students exist on campus but fail to engage with
campus to overcome this we must understand
- Learning is a complex, holistic, multi-centric
activity that occurs throughout and across the
college experience. Student development and the
adaptation of learning to students lives and
needs are fundamental parts of engaged learning
and liberal education (p. 8). - LEARNING RECONSIDERED A CAMPUS-WIDE FOCUS ON THE
STUDENT EXPERIENCE, ACPA/NASPA, 2004
10Liberal Education must be
- one that prepares us to live responsible,
productive, and creative lives in a dramatically
changing world. It is an education that fosters a
well-grounded intellectual resilience, a
disposition toward lifelong learning, and an
acceptance of responsibility for the ethical
consequences of our ideas and actions. Liberal
education requires that we understand the
foundations of knowledge and inquiry about
nature, culture and society that we master core
skills of perception, analysis, and expression
that we cultivate a respect for truth that we
recognize the importance of historical and
cultural context and that we explore connections
among formal learning, citizenship, and service
to our communities. - Association of American Colleges Universities,
October 1998 - concerned with habituation in moral conduct as
well as with its theoretical analysis. It must
educate the whole person, the appetites as well
as intellect. - John Brubacher, On the Philosophy of Higher
Edcation,1977, p. 82
11Learning Reconsidered is
- an argument for the integrated use of all of
higher educations resources in the education and
preparation of the whole student. It is also an
introduction to new ways of understanding and
supporting learning and development as
intertwined, inseparable elements of the student
experience.
- student centered as a comprehensive, holistic,
transformative activity that integrates academic
learning and student development, processes that
have often been considered separate, and even
independent of each other.
(LEARNING RECONSIDERED A CAMPUS-WIDE FOCUS ON
THE STUDENT EXPERIENCE, ACPA/NASPA, 2004)
12So what is LEARNING?
- Learning is a complex, holistic, multi-centric
activity that occurs throughout and across the
college experience. Student development, and the
adaptation of learning to students lives and
needs, are fundamental parts of engaged learning
and liberal education. True liberal education
requires the engagement of the whole student
and the deployment of every resource in higher
education.
LEARNING RECONSIDERED A CAMPUS-WIDE FOCUS ON THE
STUDENT EXPERIENCE, ACPA/NASPA, 2004
13(No Transcript)
14The key components of learning areCOGNITION
MEANING MAKING
- Cognition involves the thought processes that
people use to analyze and synthesize information
in order to make meaning of a situation or to
decide how to respond to it. Cognitive
development builds the capacity for reflective
judgment, which describes a persons increasing
ability to take information and context into
account when developing judgments or making
decisions.
- Meaning making comprises students efforts to
comprehend the essence and significance of
events, relationships, and learning to gain a
richer understanding of themselves in a larger
context and to experience a sense of wholeness.
Meaning making arises in a reflective connection
between an individual and the wider world.
(LEARNING RECONSIDERED A CAMPUS-WIDE FOCUS ON
THE STUDENT EXPERIENCE, ACPA/NASPA, 2004)
15Its about learning, not just teaching
- The idea of transformative learning reinforces
the root meaning of liberal education itself
freeing oneself from the constraints of a lack of
knowledge and an excess of simplicity. In the
transformative educational paradigm, the purpose
of educational involvement is the evolution of
multidimensional identity, including but not
limited to cognitive, affective, behavioral and
spiritual development.
- Transformative education, instead of the singular
emphasis on information transfer of much
traditional teaching, places the students
reflective processes at the core of the learning
experience and asks the student to evaluate both
new information and the frames of reference
through which the information acquires meaning.
(LEARNING RECONSIDERED A CAMPUS-WIDE FOCUS ON
THE STUDENT EXPERIENCE, ACPA/NASPA, 2004)
16Its Really About Deep Learning and the Abilities
to
- Attend to the underlying meaning of information
as well as content - Integrate and synthesize different ideas,
sources of information - Discern patterns in evidence or phenomena
- Apply knowledge in different situations
- View issues from multiple perspectives
- (George Kuh, Engaged Learning Communities
Students, Faculty, and Institutions, AACU
Institute, Burlington, VT, 2005)
17- Deep Learning is learning that takes root in
our apparatus of understanding, in the embedded
meanings that define us and that we use to define
the world. - J. Tagg (2003). The learning paradigm college (p.
70). Bolton, MA Anker
18Student Learning Outcomes
- Cognitive complexity
- Knowledge acquisition, integration, and
application - Humanitarianism
- Civic engagement
- Personal and interpersonal competence
- Practical competence
- Persistence and academic achievement
LEARNING RECONSIDERED A CAMPUS-WIDE FOCUS ON THE
STUDENT EXPERIENCE, ACPA/NASPA, 2004
19HOW DO YOU MAKE IT HAPPEN as ACAD 101 instructors?
- Engagement is the proxy to learning.
- Lee Schulman, Change, 2002, pp. 36-44
20- Kuh, G. D., Kinzie, J., Schuh, J. H., Whitt, E.
J. Associates (2005). Student success in
college Creating conditions that matter
21Its about ENGAGEMENT focusing on what
students do during college is the best way to
enhance student success!
- The contribution of out-of-class experiences to
student engagement cannot be overstated if an
institution wishes to emphasize student
achievement, satisfaction, persistence, and
learning. - (Elizabeth Whitt, About Campus, January-February,
2006, p.2)
22To successfully engage students, YOU
- Focus on student learning. Period.
- By being partners in the educational enterprise,
team teaching with faculty, creating enriching
educational opportunities for students, fostering
student success, with policies and practices that
create seamless learning environments where
boundaries between in-class and out-of-class
learning are fuzzy. - By hiring, training, and rewarding staff
committed to student learning.
(Elizabeth Whitt, Are All Your Educators
Educating? About Campus, 2006)
23To successfully engage students, YOU
- Create and sustain partnerships for learning.
- By creating cross-functional collaborations and
responsive units. - By having cocurricular programs that foster and
not compete or undercut students academic
achievement. - Hold all students to high expectations for
engagement and learning, in and out of class, on
and off campus.
(Elizabeth Whitt, Are All Your Educators
Educating? About Campus, 2006)
24To successfully engage students, YOU
- Implement a comprehensive set of safety nets and
early warning systems. - By insuring all these systems and services are
not working in isolation rather all (faculty,
student life staff, residence life staff, and
student paraprofessionals) have the attention and
draw upon resources of everyone who comes into
contact with students in difficulty. - By understanding how students spend their time
and communicating relevant information to faculty
and student life educators.
(Elizabeth Whitt, Are All Your Educators
Educating? About Campus, 2006)
25To successfully engage students, YOU
- Teach new students what it takes to succeed.
- By raising expectations for academic challenge
and engagement in educationally purposeful
activities. - By requiring students to participate in
experiences that lead to learning. - Recognize, affirm, and celebrate the educational
value of diversity. - Invest in programs and people that demonstrate
contributions to student learning and success.
(Elizabeth Whitt, Are All Your Educators
Educating? About Campus, 2006)
26To successfully engage students, YOU
- Use data to inform decisions
- Create spaces for learning
- Establish learning communities
(Elizabeth Whitt, Are All Your Educators
Educating? About Campus, 2006)
27Sources of Effects on Learning
- 1. Class size and content knowledge (-)
- 2. Instructional approaches and content
acquisition - Learning for mastery (.41 - .68 sd 16-25 ile
points) - Computer-based instruction (on avg. .31 sd, or
12 ile pts) - Supplemental Instruction (.39 sd, or 15 ile
pts) - Collaborative/Cooperative learning
- (.47 - .54 sd, or 18-20 ile pts)
- Active learning (.25 sd, or 10 ile pts)
- Small-group learning (.51 sd, or 19 ile pts)
- Service learning (, but size unknown)
(Pascarella Terenzini, 2004)
28Sources of Effects on Learning
- 3. Effective instructor behaviors
- Preparation and organization
- Clarity and understandableness
- Expressiveness/Enthusiasm
- Availability and helpfulness
- Quality and frequency of feedback to students
- Concern for, and rapport with, students
(Pascarella Terenzini, 2005)
29Sources of Effects on Learning
- The Curriculum
- An interdisciplinary, integrated core curriculum
emphasizing links across courses and ideas () - Higher-order thinking skills can be taught
- Critical thinking (.23 SD 9ile pts.)
- Postformal reasoning (.65 SD 24 ile pts.)
- (Pascarella Terenzini, 2005)
30Sources of Effects on Learning
- 5. Social and out-of-class involvement
- Quality of student effort/engagement ()
- Interactions with peers ()
- Diversity experiences ()
- Interactions with faculty members ()
- On-/off-campus work (neutral, if part-time)
(Pascarella Terenzini, 2005)