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College Curriculum: A Reader New edition [Pehme köide]

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  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 446 pages, kõrgus x laius: 225x180 mm, kaal: 860 g
  • Sari: Adolescent Cultures, School & Society 62
  • Ilmumisaeg: 22-Aug-2013
  • Kirjastus: Peter Lang Publishing Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1433117894
  • ISBN-13: 9781433117893
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 446 pages, kõrgus x laius: 225x180 mm, kaal: 860 g
  • Sari: Adolescent Cultures, School & Society 62
  • Ilmumisaeg: 22-Aug-2013
  • Kirjastus: Peter Lang Publishing Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1433117894
  • ISBN-13: 9781433117893
Mark Van Doren, the noted literary scholar, once remarked, «The college is meaningless without a curriculum, but it is more so when it has one that is meaningless.» Many current critics of undergraduate curricula in America assent to the crucial need for programmatic renewal in our colleges and universities. They bemoan the cookie-cutter sameness in far too many of them. The oddity is that U.S. colleges have long touted their «diversity» while largely holding fast to rather traditional pathways. This illuminating volume goes beyond formulaic nuts-and-bolts recipes for constructing curriculum: it seeks to interpret and analyze the contemporary landscape of college curriculum. Yet it also hopes to heighten pedagogic horizons in more imaginative, innovative ways by presenting actual curricula from more distinctive academic offerings. This book will stimulate vitally needed «out-of-the-box» thinking about curricula among faculty, administrators, and students, and ultimately invite the emergence of more radically diverse visions and realities for todays college curriculum.

Arvustused

«All too often colleges and universities go about forming and delivering their curricula without thinking deeply about what goes into them and what their overarching purposes are. Joseph L. DeVitiss thoughtful and beautifully crafted book asks the big questions: Why do we do what we do? What are students learning? How do we know what we are doing is working? This volume is essential reading for college presidents, provosts, deans, department chairs, faculty members, and students who want to make a difference in their academic institutions.» (Marybeth Gasman, Professor of Higher Education, University of Pennsylvania)

«Dr. DeVitiss book is replete with both practical advice and thought-provoking conceptual and theoretical discussions of curriculum in higher education. This volume makes a tremendous contribution to the understanding of how and why college and university curricula are created and recreated. In addition, readers are introduced to an array of distinctive and innovative curricula from U.S. institutions. They offer fascinating opportunities to explore the unique ways that academe has developed curricula toward specific aims.» (Beth Rushing, Vice President for Academic Affairs andDean of Faculty, St. Marys College of Maryland)

«Curriculum matters! This collection of essays explores a panoply of curricular approaches to undergraduate education. It highlights the vital importance of curriculum change through the lenses of distinctive initiatives in todays academic landscape. The book focuses on many key concerns: Core curriculum, civic education, multicultural education, service learning, and cooperative education, among others. It is also sensitive to the particularities of individual institutions. Joseph L. DeVitis understands and celebrates this while encouraging the rest of us to learn from assaying that diversity and picking out insights that might work for us.» (Kenneth Waltzer, Professor of History, Former Dean of James Madison College. Former Director of Integrative Studies in Arts and Humanities, Michigan State University) «All too often colleges and universities go about forming and delivering their curricula without thinking deeply about what goes into them and what their overarching purposes are. Joseph L. DeVitiss thoughtful and beautifully crafted book asks the big questions: Why do we do what we do? What are students learning? How do we know what we are doing is working? This volume is essential reading for college presidents, provosts, deans, department chairs, faculty members, and students who want to make a difference in their academic institutions.» (Marybeth Gasman, Professor of Higher Education, University of Pennsylvania)

«Dr. DeVitiss book is replete with both practical advice and thought-provoking conceptual and theoretical discussions of curriculum in higher education. This volume makes a tremendous contribution to the understanding of how and why college and university curricula are created and recreated. In addition, readers are introduced to an array of distinctive and innovative curricula from U.S. institutions. They offer fascinating opportunities to explore the unique ways that academe has developed curricula toward specific aims.» (Beth Rushing, Vice President for Academic Affairs andDean of Faculty, St. Marys College of Maryland)

«Curriculum matters! This collection of essays explores a panoply of curricular approaches to undergraduate education. It highlights the vital importance of curriculum change through the lenses of distinctive initiatives in todays academic landscape. The book focuses on many key concerns: Core curriculum, civic education, multicultural education, service learning, and cooperative education, among others. It is also sensitive to the particularities of individual institutions. Joseph L. DeVitis understands and celebrates this while encouraging the rest of us to learn from assaying that diversity and picking out insights that might work for us.» (Kenneth Waltzer, Professor of History, Former Dean of James Madison College. Former Director of Integrative Studies in Arts and Humanities, Michigan State University)

Acknowledgments i
Introduction 1(6)
Joseph L. DeVitis
Part One Patterns of College Curriculum
1 What Is a Liberal Education?
7(7)
Roger William Gilman
2 Liberal Education: The Challenge of Consumerism, Careerism, and Commodification
14(12)
Christopher J. Lucas
3 Liberal Education and Moral Education
26(15)
Daniel R. DeNicola
4 A Core Curriculum for Civic Literacy?
41(11)
Donald Lazere
5 Understanding Student Motivation: A Key to Effective Curriculum Design
52(23)
Jonathan D. Stolk
6 Community Service Learning and Higher Education: The Need for a Prerequisite to Thoughtful Service
75(16)
Eric C. Sheffield
7 Multiple Curricula in Higher Education
91(20)
William H. Schubert
Part Two Distinctive College Curricula
I Commitment to Perennial Knowledge and Values
8 The Habit of Reflection: An Essay on St. John's College
111(14)
Peter Kalkavage
9 An Essay in American Liberal Education: University of Dallas's "Core Curriculum"
125(18)
William A. Frank
II Commitment to Individualized Education
10 Fairhaven College and the Progressive Curriculum
143(25)
Roger William Gilman
11 The Plan for Bennington: An (Ever) Emergent Curriculum
168(11)
Duncan Dobbelmann
Isabel Roche
12 Multiple Routes, Alternative Learning Experiences: Developing Analytic Abilities, Practical Skills, Creativity, and Self-Reflection at Hampshire College
179(13)
Laura Wenk
Kristen Luschen
13 Individualized Undergraduate Curricula at SUNY Empire State College
192(12)
Susan Oaks
14 Prescott College: Lessons Learned "For the Liberal Arts, Environment, and Social Justice"
204(11)
Kristin Woolever
Paul Burkhardt
15 The Colorado College Block Plan
215(10)
Susan A. Ashley
16 A Community of Advisors: The Johnston Center for Integrative Studies at the University of Redlands
225(12)
Tim Seiber
Kelly Hankin
III Commitment to Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics
17 Building an Integrated Science and Technology Program at James Madison University
237(12)
Jeffrey Tang
18 Olin College: Re-Visioning Undergraduate Engineering Education
249(18)
Lynn Andrea Stein
Mark H. Somerville
Jessica Townsend
Vincent P. Manno
IV Commitment to Interdisciplinary and Multidisciplinary Perspectives
19 Teaching and Learning Outside the Box at John Jay College of Criminal Justice
267(12)
Amy S. Green
20 "Connecting the Classroom to the World": An Integrative, Interdisciplinary, and Experiential Approach to Learning at George Mason University
279(15)
Lisa Gring-Pemble
21 The Liberal Arts Approach to Leadership: The Curriculum of the Jepson School of Leadership Studies at the University of Richmond
294(13)
Terry L. Price
22 Revising the Salem Signature: Crafting an Interdisciplinary General Education Program
307(8)
Daniel O. Prosterman
23 Developing a New Individualized and Interdisciplinary Curriculum for the 21st Century: Miami University's Western Program Reimagined
315(10)
Nicholas P. Money
V Commitment to Theory Into Practice and Practice Into Theory
24 Staying Alive With The Wagner Plan: How to Keep a New First-Year Program Thriving Fifteeen Years Out
325(19)
John P. Esser
Lily D. McNair
Richard Guarasci
25 The Intellectual Inquiry Curriculum at Roanoke College
344(10)
Adrienne Bloss
Gail Steehler
26 Starting With the Students: Integrating Theory and Practice in Teaching, Learning, and Curriculum Development at Alverno College
354(14)
Stephen Sharkey
Kathleen O'Brien
27 Seeking "Productive, Caring, and Fulfilling Lives" Through the Environmental Liberal Arts at Green Mountain College
368(11)
Thomas J. Mauhs-Pugh
Meriel Brooks
28 Starting Its Second Century: Cooperative Education at the University of Cincinnati
379(16)
Michelle Clare
Anita Todd
Kettil Cedercreutz
29 Building Students' Capacity to Lead: The West Point Leader Development System
395(22)
Bruce Keith
Thomas Judd
VI Commitment to Local, National, and Global Concerns
30 From the Local to the Global, to the "Beyond" and the In-Between: Earlham College's Peace and Global Studies Program
417(12)
Joanna Swanger
31 Union College's Ethics Across the Curriculum Program
429(6)
Robert Baker
Contributors 435
Joseph L. DeVitis has taught at five universities in his 40-year academic career. Recipient of the Distinguished Alumni Award from the College of Education, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, he is a past president of the American Educational Studies Association (AESA), the Council of Learned Societies in Education, and the Society of Professors of Education. Author or editor of 15 books, he has written extensively on moral development, liberal education, collegiate service-learning, and educational reform. His most recent books are a series of notable readers for Peter Lang Publishing: Contemporary Colleges and Universities (2013); Critical Civic Literacy (2011); Character and Moral Education (2011), edited with Tianlong Yu; and Adolescent Education (2010), edited with Linda Irwin-DeVitis. The latter two books received Critics Choice Awards from AESA as outstanding books of the year.