Title: What
1Whats All This Talk About Learning Communities
- Cindy Anderson, Associate Director
- Sue Belatti, Coordinator of Learning Communities
2Global Vision . . .
- Students who get the most out of college, who
grow the most academically, and who are the
happiest , organize their time to include
interpersonal activities with faculty members, or
with fellow students, built around substantive
academic work. - Richard J. Light Harvard Assessment Seminars
(Second Report) - Explorations with students and faculty about
teaching, learning, and student life. - Student learning is strongly influenced by a
variety of interconnected out-of-classroom
factors, most notably student-to-student and
student-to-faculty interactions. - Alexander W. Astin 1993
- What Matters in College? Four Critical Years
Revisited
3A Distinctive Mission with a Student-Centered
Difference. . .
- Northern Arizona University Mission
- To provide an outstanding undergraduate
residential education strengthened by research,
graduate and professional programs and
sophisticated methods of distance delivery. - Dr. John Haeger -- April 11, 2007
- Conversations with the President Learning and
Enterprise - 2006-07 Presidential Speakers Series
4HOGWARTS The (Ultimate?) Learning Community
5HOGWARTS The (Ultimate?) Learning Community
- Essential elements in the Hogwarts Learning
Community that create a challenging and
supportive learning environment - Diversity
- First Year Experience
- (Living) Learning Communities
- Good Practice in Teaching and Learning
- Civic Responsibility
6Global Vision of Learning Communities
- The Learning Communities movement is a national
initiative grounded in research and ongoing
dialogue about undergraduate education. - Learning Communities are part of a success
strategy aimed at enhancing the undergraduate
educational experience. - Learning Communities have been shown to
contribute to students academic success,
engagement, and retention. - Learning Communities take on many forms and have
a variety of structures.
7Specialization and Overlap in the Educational
Community
8Types of Learning Communities (B.L. Smith 1991)
- Linked Courses
- Clustered Courses expanded form of the Linked
Course Model with 3 or 4 courses that speak to a
common theme. - Freshman Interest Groups expansion of the
Cluster Course Model with a Peer Mentor and
credit-bearing orientation class. - Coordinated Studies fully-integrated 16 credit
programs that last a term or a year.
9Shared Resources
- Residence Life Offerings
- Facilities
- Staff (both student and professional)
- Programming support
- Student access
- Academic Affairs Offerings
- Focused educational programming
- Added value to the residential experience
- Improved housing recruitment retention
- Additional university presence
10National Status
- Actual definition is somewhat elusive
- Many programs call themselves living-learning,
but are they? - While extremely popular, there is no consensus in
higher education as to what constitutes a L/L
program - Examples can run the gamut from theme floors to
4-year, degree granting residential programs - Our basic definition
- Program involves students who live together in a
discrete portion of a residence hall (or the
entire building) - Program has staff and resources dedicated for
that program only, and not for the entire
residence hall (if program is not the entire
building) - Participants in the program partake in special
academic and co-curricular programming designed
especially for them.
11Learning Communities at Northern Arizona
University 06-07
- Academic Focused
- - Business
- - Education House
- - Forestry Tree House
- - Hotel Restaurant Management
- - Honors Program
- Theme Based
- - Outdoor Recreation (2 locations)
- - Eco House
12Learning Communities at Northern Arizona
University 07-08
- Academic Focused
- - Academic Exploration (4)
- - Biomedical Professions/Pre-Med
- - Business (2)
- - CENS (CM, Physics Astronomy, STAR Pals)
- - Education House (2)
- - Forestry Tree House
- - Hotel Restaurant Management (2)
- - Honors Program
- Theme Based
- - Outdoor Recreation (2 locations)
- - Eco House
- - STAR
13Components of Current Learning Communities
- Cohorts of 20- 30 students
- Faculty Staff Partners
- Paired Courses (major-based LCs)
- Resident Assistants Community Mentors
tied to Major - Programming Efforts
- - academic-focused
- - social interactions
- - faculty/staff interactions
- - advising
- - In-Hall Study Groups
14Assessment How might you know if Learning
Communities are doing what you wanted?
15Assessment
- Multiple Domains of Assessment
- Retention Data (cohort tracking)
- Satisfaction (Quality of Life)
- Individual Level (RA Survey, LC Survey)
- Engagement (NSSE, NSLLP)
16Retention Goals at Northern Arizona University
- 5 Year Goal 2006-2011
- All NAU Cohort 76
- 10 Year Goal 2006-2016
- All NAU Cohort 80
17Learning Communities at Northern Arizona
University
- Retention (Fall 2004 to Fall 2005)
Learning Community Cohort 81 retained
All NAU Cohort 70 retained
18Learning Communities at Northern Arizona
University
- Retention (Fall 2005 to Fall 2006)
Learning Community Cohort 73 retained
All NAU Cohort 72 retained
192007 Quality of Life Survey
202007 Quality of Life Survey
212007 Quality of Life Survey
222007 Learning Community Survey
232007 Learning Community Survey
242007 Learning Community Survey
25What Did We Learn? (2004 NSLLP)full study
livelearnstudy.net
- Brief Background Common elements of effective
learning communities - They create a community of people who are
pursuing common learning objectives - They attempt to create interlocking small group
interaction among participants - They provide networks of support using faculty,
staff and peers - They provide a vehicle for academic and social
integration into the institution - Living-learning programs attempt to achieve its
objectives through seamless learning
opportunitiesin classrooms, in small peer
groups, in students living environments. . .
26What Did We Learn? (2004 NSLLP)full study
livelearnstudy.net
- L/L vs. Non-L/L Students College Environments
Activities
Higher Mean Scores L/L Non-L/L Higher Mean Scores L/L Non-L/L Higher Mean Scores L/L Non-L/L
Peer academic social discussions X
Faculty mentoring relationship X
Res. Hall climate academically and socially supportive X
Plan on following in future Practicum/Internship Study Abroad Research w/Professor Senior Capstone/Thesis X X X X
27What Did We Learn? (2004 NSLLP)full study
livelearnstudy.net
- L/L vs. Non-L/L Students Student Outcomes
Higher Mean Scores L/L Non-L/L Higher Mean Scores L/L Non-L/L Higher Mean Scores L/L Non-L/L
Smooth transition to college X
Critical thinking abilities X
Commitment to civic engagement X
Low levels of binge drinking X
Growth in cognitive complexity, liberal learning, personal philosophy N/S
Higher academic self-confidence N/S
Appreciation for racial/ethnic diversity N/S
28Theme-based Typology 14 Primary Categories
- Civic/Social Leadership (21)
- Cultural (32)
- Disciplinary (67)
- Fine Creative Arts (22)
- General Academic (7)
- Honors (22)
- Multi-Disciplinary (4)
- Outdoor Recreation (2)
- Research (2)
- Residential College (7)
- Transition (30) FY
- Upper Division (4)
- Wellness/Healthy Living (9)
- Womens (18)
29Key Issues for LCs at NAU
- Determine a model for the expansion of the
Learning Communities program to include shared
support from the Divisions of Student Affairs and
Academic Affairs. - Identify institutional fiscal resources for
compensation systems for faculty and staff, and
funding models that consider a value added
strand for participating students. - Establish/Define stronger curriculum and academic
support within the Learning Communities. - Determine Learning Outcomes for all of the
Learning Communities including an assessment plan
for measuring these outcomes. - Develop a framework/broad-based plan reflecting
the vision for Learning Communities on a macro
level.
30LC Background Readings
- Cross, K. Patricia. 1998. Why Learning
Communities? Why Now? About Campus. - Kuh, George et. al. 1996. The Student Learning
Imperative Implications for Student Affairs.
American College Personnel Association. - Laufgraben, Jodi Levine and Nancy S. Shapiro.
2004. Sustaining and Improving Learning
Communities. San Francisco Jossey-Bass - Smith, Barbara Leigh. 2001. The challenge of
Learning Commuunities as a Growing National
Movement. Association of American Colleges and
Universities. - Zeller, William J. 2006. Classrooms Without
Borders. The Future of the College Housing
Profession. ACUHO-I Press.
31LC Background Web Resources
- 2007 National Study of Living-Learning Programs.
Website at www.livelearnstudy.net. - Bowling Green State University Learning
Communities At-A-Glance. - www.bgsu.edu/offices/mc/communities/