The Eastern Integrative Learning Experience Office of the Provost & Vice President of Academic Affairs Eastern Illinois University.

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Transcript The Eastern Integrative Learning Experience Office of the Provost & Vice President of Academic Affairs Eastern Illinois University.

The Eastern Integrative
Learning Experience
Office of the Provost & Vice President of
Academic Affairs
Eastern Illinois University
What is Integrative Learning?
Integrative learning entails providing students
with coherent curricula, significant learning
and life experiences outside of the traditional
classroom context, and ample opportunity for
guided reflection. It enables students to tie the
disparate parts of their academic, personal,
and professional lives into a holistic,
transformative university experience.
Why Integrative Learning?
• A concept with an existing body of literature
• Speaks directly to Eastern’s overarching goal -- being
the “best” at integrating students’ academic and
personal experiences
• An umbrella for the academic initiatives which we
have been pursuing for several years: Study Abroad,
Undergraduate Scholarship, Honors, Service Learning
• Includes many elements of the educational
experience we have offered for many years
Characteristics of Integrative Learning
 Intentionality
 Reflection
 Problem-solving
 Collaboration
 Engagement
 Metacognition
Integrative Learning Requires:
Intentionally and purposefully including two
activities in courses and in co-curricular
activities:
1. Connecting (skills and knowledge from
multiple sources and experiences)
2. Reflecting (on learning, experience, and the
connections between them).
High Impact, Integrative Experiences
 First-Year Seminars and Experiences
 Collaborative Assignments and Projects
 Writing Intensive Courses
 Study Abroad
 Research, Scholarship, Creative Activity
 Student Teaching
 Internships
 Service-Learning, Community-Based Learning
What do these have in common?
 Each puts the student in a practical
situation in which she has problems to
solve or challenges to overcome.
 Each requires the student to apply skills
and knowledge acquired in one context
to a situation in a different context.
How can we prepare students to
take full advantage of these
experiences?
 Instill habits of reflection
 Encourage students to be intentional
about their choices, both academic and
personal/professional
 Provide experiences in which students
can practice integrating skills and
knowledge from one context into another
“One of the oddest things about the
university is that it calls itself a ‘community of
scholars,’ yet it organizes itself in a way that
conceals the intellectual links of that
community from those who don't already see
them.”
--Gerald Graff. “Colleges Are Depriving Students of a
Connected View of Scholarship.” Chronicle of Higher Education.
13 Feb. 1991
Types of Integrative Learning
 Horizontal
 Vertical
 Global
 Personal
 “Cosmic”
Adapted in part from SUNY Oswego catalyst project
Horizontal Academic Integration
 Provides opportunities for students to
reflect upon connections among their
courses through exercises such as oneminute papers, focused class discussions,
reflective assignments.
Vertical Academic Integration
 Encourages students to reach back and
review/use skills used in prerequisite courses to
enhance learning in current course.
 Encourages students to reach back to general
education courses to provide grounding and
inform learning in major courses.
Global Academic Integration
 Encourages students to make connections
among courses using an overarching concept or
theory that applies to many courses.
Personal Integration
 Encourages students to apply academic
learning to outside-of-class experiences.
 Encourages students to bring personal,
social, cultural, and professional
experiences to bear on what they are
learning in class.
“Cosmic” Integration
 Enables students to recognize the
interconnectedness of all things.
What have we accomplished?
Positives:
 Presidential buy-in
 General diffusion of the idea
 Website with information and student examples
 Departmental discussions – predominantly listings of
things already being done
 An increase in the number of integrative experiences
 Not a lot of vocal or overt push-back
 Many faculty doing things consistent with IL
EIU’s Integrative Learning Web Site
Elements of Integrative Learning
EIU Reads
Appreciative Advising
General Education
Major/Minor Curricula
Student Life
Co-Curricular Experiences
EIU Reads
 Enhances critical reading skills
 Develops social/academic skills through
interactions with faculty and students
 Can provide a follow-up assignment
wherein the student reflects on her own
reading tastes, strengths, & abilities
Appreciative Advising
 Academic advisors include discussions of
student’s career goals and personal
aspirations while recommending courses
and co-curricular activities.
General Education
• Include assignments that allow student to reflect upon her
own learning process
• Include assignments that allow student to connect to other
coursework
• Chosen to coincide with student’s academic and career
goals
• Provide opportunities in each course to connect to
material in other courses: e.g., literature connects to
psychology, political science to ethics, sociology to history,
fine arts to physics . . . .
Major/Minor Curricula
Classes build upon disciplinary expertise
but also reach back to General Education
classes in science, social science, fine
arts, humanities
Include assignments that allow students
to reflect on learning process, human
experience …
Some Considerations
• How often can personal/professional
reflection be incorporated into
coursework?
• Can students’ personal/professional
aspirations be contextualized through their
coursework?
• Can academic content be applied to out-ofclass experiences?
• How coherent is the curriculum and is that
coherence explicitly explained to students?
• How can Reflection be embedded in the
curriculum and be required before and
after all major integrative activities
Honors Pilot
• The Presidential Scholars Program has included
several elements to promote integrated academic
and personal development:
Academic Plan
Required participation in student
life activities
Required high impact experience
• For all freshman Honors students, the new 1- credit
required class
Questions?
 Contact Provost Blair Lord
[email protected]