Tuesday, May 2, 2017
Have you ever thought about what we are all doing in higher education (or any level of education for that matter)? We are teaching students from the things we know now to help them be the leaders of the future. We are literally teaching then for things that will happen that we may or may not know anything about. It really drives the point home that we can't just worry about covering the material but must focus on helping them become self-guided learners. They need to be adults who can learn things on their own so that they will be able to handle the problems of the future. That was one of the reasons I was excited to attend the American Association of Community Colleges conference in Louisiana last weekend. As I participated in a session about innovative learning going on at several of the City University of New York schools, I marveled at how most of my colleagues are wrestling with the same issues that we are encountering. Today I encountered a special section in the The Chronicle of Higher Education that talks about a student leadership development program at CUNY. The program is aimed at creating leaders for the future. The City University of New York’s Futures Initiative, founded in 2014,
is a program that advocates for both authentic innovation and equity.
According to Cathy Davidson, the Initiative’s founding director and a
distinguished professor of English at CUNY’s Graduate Center: “Normally
when we think of innovation in higher education, we think of extremely
well-funded programs for typically wealthy students who plan on going
into jobs at the very top of the technology world. Not necessarily
innovation that serves the good for the most people. Our credo is that
unless your innovation has equity built into it, it’s not really
innovation.” It certainly raises a lot of questions as we come to the end of the spring semester.