| Apathetic students, illiterate graduates, incompetent teaching, impersonal campuses
-- so rolls the drumfire of criticism of higher education. More than two years of
reports have spelled out the problems. States have been quick to respond by holding out
carrots and beating with sticks.
There are neither enough carrots nor enough sticks to improve undergraduate education
without the commitment and action of students and faculty members. They are the precious
resources on whom the improvement of undergraduate education depends.
But how can students and faculty members improve undergraduate education? Many campuses
around the country are asking this question. To provide a focus for their work, we offer
seven principles based on research on good teaching and learning in colleges and
universities.
Good practice in undergraduate education:
- encourages contact between students and faculty,
- develops reciprocity and cooperation among students,
- encourages active learning,
- gives prompt feedback,
- emphasizes time on task,
- communicates high expectations, and
- respects diverse talents and ways of learning.
We can do it ourselves - with a little bit of help...
These seven principles are not ten commandments shrunk to a 20th century attention span.
They are intended as guidelines for faculty members, students, and administrators --
with support from state agencies and trustees -- to improve teaching and learning. These
principles seem like good common sense, and they are -- because many teachers and students
have experienced them and because research supports them. They rest on 50 years of
research on the way teachers teach and students learn, how students work and play with
one another, and how students and faculty talk to each other.
While each practice can stand alone on its own, when all are present their effects
multiply. Together they employ six powerful forces in education:
- activity,
- expectations,
- cooperation,
- interaction,
- diversity, and
- responsibility.
Good practices hold as much meaning for professional programs as for the liberal arts.
They work for many different kinds of students -- white, black, Hispanic, Asian, rich,
poor, older, younger, male, female, well-prepared, underprepared.
But the ways different institutions implement good practice depend very much on their
students and their circumstances. In what follows, we describe several different
approaches to good practice that have been used in different kinds of settings in the
last few years. In addition, the powerful implications of these principles for the way
states fund and govern higher education and for the way institutions are run are
discussed briefly at the end.
As faculty members, academic administrators, and student personnel staff, we have spent
most of our working lives trying to understand our students, our colleagues, our
institutions and ourselves. We have conducted research on higher education with
dedicated colleagues in a wide range of schools in this country. With the implications
of this research for practice, we hope to help us all do better.
We address the teacher's how, not the subject-matter what, of good
practice in undergraduate education. We recognize that content and pedagogy interact in
complex ways. We are also aware that there is much healthy ferment within and among the
disciplines. What is taught, after all, is at least as important as how it is taught.
In contrast to the long history of research in teaching and learning, there is little
research on the college curriculum. We cannot, therefore, make responsible
recommendations about the content of good undergraduate education. That work is yet to
be done. This much we can say: An undergraduate education should prepare students to
understand and deal intelligently with modern life. What better place to start but in
the classroom and on our campuses? What better time than now?
Seven Principles of Good Practice.
- 1. Encourages Contact Between Students and Faculty
- Frequent student-faculty contact in and out of classes is the most
important factor in student motivation and involvement. Faculty
concern helps students get through rough times and keep on working.
Knowing a few faculty members well enhances students' intellectual
commitment and encourages them to think about their own values and
future plans.
- 2. Develops Reciprocity and Cooperation Among Students
- Learning is enhanced when it is more like a team effort that a
solo race. Good learning, like good work, is collaborative and social,
not competitive and isolated. Working with others often increases
involvement in learning. Sharing one's own ideas and responding to
others' reactions sharpens thinking and deepens understanding.
- 3. Encourages Active Learning
- Learning is not a spectator sport. Students do not learn much just
by sitting in classes listening to teachers, memorizing pre-packaged
assignments, and spitting out answers. They must talk about what they
are learning, write about it, relate it to past experiences and apply
it to their daily lives. They must make what they learn part of
themselves.
- 4. Gives Prompt Feedback
- Knowing what you know and don't know focuses learning. Students
need appropriate feedback on performance to benefit from courses.
When getting started, students need help in assessing existing
knowledge and competence. In classes, students need frequent
opportunities to perform and receive suggestions for improvement. At
various points during college, and at the end, students need chances
to reflect on what they have learned, what they still need to know,
and how to assess themselves.
- 5. Emphasizes Time on Task
- Time plus energy equals learning. There is no substitute for time
on task. Learning to use one's time well is critical for students and
professionals alike. Students need help in learning effective time
management. Allocating realistic amounts of time means effective
learning for students and effective teaching for faculty. How an
institution defines time expectations for students, faculty,
administrators, and other professional staff can establish the basis
of high performance for all.
- 6. Communicates High Expectations
- Expect more and you will get more. High expectations are important
for everyone -- for the poorly prepared, for those unwilling to exert
themselves, and for the bright and well motivated. Expecting students
to perform well becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy when teachers and
institutions hold high expectations for themselves and make extra
efforts.
- 7. Respects Diverse Talents and Ways of Learning
- There are many roads to learning. People bring different talents
and styles of learning to college. Brilliant students in the seminar
room may be all thumbs in the lab or art studio. Students rich in
hands-on experience may not do so well with theory. Students need the
opportunity to show their talents and learn in ways that work for them.
Then they can be pushed to learn in new ways that do not come so easily.
Teachers and students hold the main responsibility for improving undergraduate education.
But they need a lot of help. College and university leaders, state and federal officials,
and accrediting associations have the power to shape an environment that is favorable to
good practice in higher education.
What qualities must this environment have?
- A strong sense of shared purposes.
- Concrete support from administrators and faculty leaders for those
purposes.
- Adequate funding appropriate for the purposes.
- Policies and procedures consistent with the purposes.
- Continuing examination of how well the purposes are being achieved.
There is good evidence that such an environment can be created. When this happens,
faculty members and administrators think of themselves as educators. Adequate resources
are put into creating opportunities for faculty members, administrators, and students
to celebrate and reflect on their shared purposes. Faculty members receive support and
release time for appropriate professional development activities. Criteria for hiring
and promoting faculty members, administrators, and staff support the institution's
purposes. Advising is considered important. Departments, programs, and classes are
small enough to allow faculty members and students to have a sense of community, to
experience the value of their contributions, and to confront the consequences of their
failures.
States, the federal government and accrediting associations affect the kind of
environment that can develop on campuses in a variety of ways. The most important is
through the allocation of financial support. States also influence good practice by
encouraging sound planning, setting priorities, mandating standards, and reviewing and
approving programs. Regional and professional accrediting associations require
self-study and peer review in making judgments about programs and institutions.
These sources of support and influence can encourage environments for good practice in
undergraduate education by:
- setting policies that are consistent with good practice in
undergraduate education,
- holding high expectations for institutional performance,
- keeping bureaucratic regulations to a minimum that is compatible
with public accountability,
- allocating adequate funds for new undergraduate programs and the
professional development of faculty members, administrators, and staff,
- encouraging employment of under-represented groups among
administrators, faculty members, and student services professionals, and
- providing the support for programs, facilities, and financial aid
necessary for good practice in undergraduate education.
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