|
Day One:
Thursday, November 18, 2004
Welcoming Remarks and Introduction
Plenary Session: Research
and Undergraduate Education; A Powerful Partnership
This session will establish the essential synergy between research universities'
dual missions to generate and transmit knowledge, and it will confirm
the dimension this synergy brings to undergraduate education. Two distinguished
speakers will begin the process of defining the dynamic relationship between
research and undergraduate teaching and learning and asserting the powerful
advantage that research universities enjoy as a result of this relationship.
Breakout Sessions: Bringing Research to the
Classroom
The challenges in translating research into the classroom vary by field
and educational setting. These sessions will enable conference participants
to investigate strategies and methods for weaving what is happening at
the research level into specific educational contexts. Participants will
be able to choose a session that relates directly to their own teaching
and research. Although the issues of integration will differ by situation,
these breakout sessions will all emphasize ways to engage undergraduates
in the act of discovery.
| A.
At the Institutional Level |
B.
Within Fields and Majors |
These
sessions will consider ways in which research and research-related
experiences can transform and enhance teaching and learning in contexts
that cut across departments and fields.
- In
introductory and foundation courses
Leader:
Joseph
Potenza, Professor of Chemistry, Rutgers University
- Within
learning communities
Leaders:
Greig Stewart,
Executive Director, College Park Scholars Program, and Rebecca
Thomas, Assistant Director, Gemstone Program, University
of Maryland, College Park
- Within
research service learning
Leader:
Robert
Thompson, Professor of Psychology, Dean of Trinity
College and Vice Provost for Undergraduate Education, Duke
University
- Research
as an integrative experience
Leader:
Lee Willard, Associate Dean, Arts and Sciences
and Trinity College, Duke University
- Technology
and pedagogy: Faculty development's piece of the undergraduate
research puzzle
Leader:
Renata
Engel, Professor of Engineering
Graphics and Engineering Science & Mechanics and Associate
Vice Provost for Teaching Excellence, Pennsylvania State
University
|
|
These
sessions will examine approaches to integrating research within different
fields and majors.
- Performing
and Fine Arts
Leader:
Donald
McKayle,
Choreographer/Director,
Claire Trevor Professor of Dance and Artistic Director UCI
Dance, University of California, Irvine
- Engineering
and Computer Science
Leader:
Joseph J. McCarthy, Associate
Professor, Department of Chemical and Petroleum Engineering,
University of Pittsburgh
- Experimental
and data intensive Social Sciences, related areas within
Psychology and Management
Leaders:
Wiliam
Frawley, Professor of Anthropology and Psychology
and Dean, Columbian College of Arts & Sciences, and
Elliot
Hirshman, Professor and Chair of Psychology,
George Washington University
- Humanities
and discursive Social Sciences: A template approach to undergraduate
research
Leaders:
Gerald
Graff, Professor of English
and Education, University of Illinois at Chicago,
and
Cathy
Birkenstein-Graff
- Life
Sciences and related areas within Psychology
Leader:
Sarah
Elgin, Professor of Biology, Genetics and Education,
Washington University in St. Louis
- Physical
Sciences and Mathematics
Leader:
Robin L. Garrell, Professor of
Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Californi, Los
Angeles
|
|
Plenary Session
2: Incorporating Principles of Learning into Undergraduate Education
Recent advances in the "science of learning" offer universities
the potential to re-shape their undergraduate education to meet the varied
needs of their large and diverse student populations. The challenge is how
to translate basic research findings into educational applications. This
session will provide an overview of the current state of research on learning,
consider how the effective application of relevant principles can improve
faculty teaching and student learning, and examine challenges of application
within the research university context
Breakout Sessions 2: Applying
Principles of Learning in Diverse Undergraduate Educational Settings
These sessions will be organized around the central question, "How
can research universities apply and extend their knowledge of how people
learn, think and remember to improve learning in the university and beyond?"
Conference participants will endeavor to answer this question as it applies
in specific higher educational constructs. They will also probe ways in
which principles of learning can be adapted to address different disciplinary
learning styles and the needs of diverse populations.
| A.
Institutional Contexts |
B.
Disciplinary and Interdisciplinary Contexts |
- Mapping
learning principles to knowledge structures in the natural and
behavioral sciences
Leader:
Kenneth Kotovsky,
Professor of Psychology, Carnegie Mellon University
- Bringing
new learning modalities to all disciplines
Leader:
Gregory Bothun,
Professor of Physics, University of Oregon
- Bringing
instructional innovations that work in one discipline to other
disciplines
Leaders:
Patricia Pukkila, Associate Professor of Biology and
Director, Office of Undergraduate Research, and Martha
Arnold, Director of Curriculum Development, Center
for Teaching and Learning, University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill
- Engaging
and retaining targeted populations
Leader:
David Ferguson, Distinguished Service
Professor of Technology and Society and Applied Mathematics and
Chair, Department of Technology & Society, Stony Brook University
|
- Performing
and Fine Arts
Leaders:
David Hertz,
Professor of Comparative Literature, and
Giancarlo
Maiorino, Rudy
Professor of Comparative Literature and Director of the the Center
for Comparative Art Studies, Indiana University
Bloomington
- Engineering
and Computer Science
Leader:
Karan Watson,
Regents Professor of Electrical Engineering, Dean of Faculties
and Associate Provost, Texas A&M University
- Experimental
and data intensive Social Sciences, related areas within Psychology,
and Management
Leader:
Milton D. Hakel,
Professor of Psychology and Ohio Board of Regents Eminent Scholar,
Bowling Green State University
- Humanities
and discursive Social Sciences
Leaders:
Lucia
Gilbert,
Professor of Educational Psychology and Vice Provost for Undergraduate
Studies; Cory
Reed, Associate Professor, Department of Spanish and
Portuguese; Paige
Schilt, Director, Bridging Disciplines Programs; and
Paul Woodruff, Darrel K. Royal Professor
in Ethics and Director of the Plan II Honors Program, University
of Texas at Austin
- Life
Sciences and related areas of Psychology
Leader:
Diane Ebert-May,
Professor of Plant Biology, Michigan State University
- Physical
Sciences and Mathematics
Leaders:
Robert Mathieu, Professor of Astronomy,
University of Wisconsin- Madison, and Marilla
Svinicki, Associate Professor, Department of Educational
Psychology, University of Texas at Austin
- Interdisciplinary
Programs: integrating different orientations and perspectives
Leader:
Ellen Yi-Luen Do, Associate Professor
of Architecture and Co-Director of Design Machine Group, University
of Washington
|
Introduction:
Summary of First-Day Activities and Introduction to
the Second Day
Wendy
Katkin, Director, The Reinvention Center |
Plenary Session: Providing
a Quality Research-Based Undergraduate Education: Critical Issues and
Challenges of the Next Five Years
This
session will look to the future and contemplate major forces that are
re-shaping research universities. Among the most dominant are the rapidly-changing
state of knowledge, the increasing "fluidity" of disciplines,
new technologies that create new opportunities, and new undergraduate
populations. Three distinguished leaders in higher education will examine
the challenges posed by these forces and demonstrate why and how research
universities are uniquely positioned to respond.
Breakout
Sessions 3: Addressing the Challenges
These sessions will allow for in-depth examination of some of the most trenchant
challenges research universities will face with respect to undergraduate
education. They are noteworthy for the range of issues and various aspects
of undergraduate education on which they impinge.
- Community-based
Research: Taking it to the streets
Leaders:
Dennis
Jacobs, Professor of Chemistry and Associate Provost
and Vice President, University of Notre Dame, and Julie
Ellison, Professor of American Culture, English and
Art and Design and Director, Imagining America: Artists and Scholars
in Public Life, University of Michigan
- Developing
resources and funds for a research-based undergraduate education
Leader:
Patricia Iannuzzi, Associate University
Librarian and Director, Doe/Moffitt Libraries and Interim Director,
Collections, University of California, Berkeley
- Expanding
opportunities for undergraduate research: Engaging the professional
schools and developing new financial and human resources
Leader:
Matthew Santirocco,
Professor of Classics, Angelo J. Ranieri Director of Ancient Studies,
and Dean of the College of Arts and Science, New York University
- Forming
multi-campus partnerships
Leaders:
Jeff Roberts,
Professor and Director of the University of Minnesota RSEC, Department
of Chemistry, University of Minnesota, and Robin
Tanke, Assistant Professor, Department of Chemistry,
University of Wisconsin- Stevens Point
- Graduate
students as teachers and mentors of undergraduate research
Leaders:
Janet Rankin,
Associate Professor of Engineering, Asociate Director for Physical
& Life Sciences, and
Laura Hess,
Associate Director for the Humanities and Social Sciences , The
Harriet W. Sheridan Center for Teaching and Learning, Brown University
- Increasing
engagement and retention through research and creative endeavors
Leader:
Pedro Castillo, Professor of History
and Provost, Oakes College, University of California, Santa Cruz
- Promoting
connections between 2- and 4-year institutions
Leaders:
Caesar Sereseres,
Professor of Political Science and Associate Dean of Undergraduate
Studies, University of California, Irvine,
and
Victor Jaime,
Vice President for Student Services, Imperial Valley College
- Research
and creative activity: Critical components of a sound liberal
arts education
Leader:
Sue V. Rosser,
Professor of History, Technology and Society and Dean of the Ivan
Allen College, Georgia Institute of Technology
- Strategies
for effecting rapid translation of ongoing research in the curriculum
Leaders:
David Lynn, Candler Professor of Chemistry
and Biology,
and Dawn Comeau,
Department of Women’s Studies and Rollins School of Public
Health, Emory University
- Teaching
and Learning in an Age of Technology: The Development of a Genetics
Cognitive Tutor
Leader:
Elizabeth W.
Jones, Schwertz University Professor of Life Sciences
and Head, Department of Biological Sciences, Carnegie Mellon University
- The
changing roles of the humanities and social sciences in a changing
university
Leader:
Reed Dasenbrock,
Professor of English and Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences,
University of New Mexico
|
Lunch/Future
Directions
The conference will conclude with a working lunch organized
around a discussion of the common themes and recommendations that emerge
from the plenary and breakout sessions. The Reinvention Center will use
the discussion as a basis for establishing its priorities and planning
actions for the next two-three years.
Introduction: Wendy Katkin
Speaker: Gerald
Graff, Professor of English and Education, University of Illinois
at Chicago
"Withholding
the Academic Disciplines from Undergraduates"
Panel: Three Perspectives
Bernadette
Gray-Little, Professor of Psychology and Dean, College of Arts and
Sciences,University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill: The
Social Sciences
Judith Ramaley, Assistant
Director, Education & Human Resources, National Science Foundation:
A Global Perspective
William Wood, Distinguished Professor
of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology, University of Colorado
at Boulder: The
Natural Sciences
Closing Remarks
|
 |