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Faculty Hot Topics: Teaching Across Disciplines

Hot topics of interest to the Manhattanville faculty.

Welcome!

This page was created in Spring, 2023, to advance community-wide conversations about curricular and institutional change.

Online Library Books

About the Paradigm Project

Examples and Use Cases

  • Cal State University Chico State First Year Experience, including their discussion of the Town Hall and the Sense of Place Symposium.  BT2P gave early grants to this initiative, and its development is described in a case study on our website from about eight years ago.
  • University of Wisconsin Green Bay Gateway to Phoenix Success first year curriculum.  The current curriculum and orientation is described here, but it’s a slimmed down version of a more visionary program that gets a chapter in the Redesigning Liberal Education program.  I’d focus on the original version (which was slimmed down because of budgetary pressures.)
  • San Francisco State University Metropolitan Academies.  This is my favorite one.  It serves one-third of all incoming students in a big state university for the first two years, combining curriculum with community-building, public engagement, and a strong commitment to student agency, and it’s produced higher success rates.
  • Nevada State College Nepantla Program.  I don’t know this first-hand, only through Relationship-Rich Education.
  • Lehigh University Mountaintop Initiative.  One of several initiatives focused on using creativity and design thinking for problem-based learning.
  • Elon University Experiential Learning Requirement (ELR).  Students required to do at least two of five ELRs (service learning, undergrad research, internships, global learning, leadership), documented in a separate portfolio.
  • Bennington Field Work Term.  Dates back to Bennington’s founding in the 1920s as a pedagogically radical college.
  • Georgetown University CALL (Capitol Applied Learning Labs).  Immersive semester in separate downtown campus focused on big, wicked problems and experiential learning.
  • Bates College Purposeful Work program.  Infusion of exploration of work throughout liberal learning at Bates.
  • James Madison University X-Labs.  Transdisciplinary, problem-based, innovation-oriented learning through courses, faculty-led projects, and student projects.  Jump-started by state grant.  They want to generalize this learning beyond the labs.
  • Plymouth State University learning model, including integrated clusters, open labs, and capstones.  The Chronicle devoted an article on this somewhere around 2017.  I’m drawn to this model, but don’t have any connection to these folks.
  • Olin College of Engineering.  Small, stand-alone college, known for project-based and ‘human-design-centered’ curriculum.
  • College Unbound.  Small, experimental adult-serving college with very high success rates (and affordability).  Kind of a Hampshire for adults.  Good 2020 article in the Chronical about it.
  • Consortium for Innovative Environments in Learning.  Consortium of about a dozen small, innovative liberal-arts institution, including Bennington, Hampshire, New College in the University of Alabama, Florida’s New College (under attack), Evergreen State.  They’re all suggestive in different ways for you.

Introductory Readings

About the Paradigm Project

Selected Articles

Here are selected readings on building interdisciplinary curriculum and related concerns..

Suggestions for additional resources are welcome!