THE STUDENTS SPEAK
Harry Brighouse shares instructional practices that undergraduates say
they have rarely encountered and think should be more widely shared. The first recommendation of the American Academy’s recent report "The Future of Undergraduate Education" is simple: we should work to improve undergraduate instruction. But how? In many disciplines, we don’t have rigorous measures of
learning, so we cannot easily identify the best practitioners and simply
copy what they do. Undergraduate students, however, experience numerous
teachers and a lot of instruction, some good and some bad. They are a
source of valuable information about what constitutes good practice. So, at a recent event co-sponsored by the Center for Ethics and
Education, the University of Wisconsin at Madison College of Letters and
Science, and the American Academy, we asked five undergraduate students
at the university to describe instructional practices that they’ve
encountered rarely but were especially effective -- and that they think
should be more widely shared. Of course, some strategies work in some
disciplines better than others, in some kinds of classes better than
others and for some instructors better than others. Here’s what the students at the event told us.
WHAT IS TRADITIONAL?
Popular culture tells us that college "kids" are recent high school
graduates, living on campus, taking art history, drinking too much on
weekends, and (hopefully) graduating four years later. But these days that narrative of the residential, collegiate experience is way off,
says Alexandria Walton Radford, who heads up postsecondary education
research at RTI International, a think tank in North Carolina. What we
see on movie screens and news sites, she says, is skewed to match the
perceptions of the elite: journalists, researchers, policymakers. Today's college student is decidedly nontraditional — and has been for a while. "This isn't a new phenomenon," Radford says. "We've been looking at this since 1996." So, what do we know about these "typical" college students of today?