CORE
Five year plan
Freshman Studies Liberal Arts Core and
High School to College Bridge
Outline and Draft 3.0: June 14,
2008 (Before appointment to Lane College for 2008-2009)
CORE stands for “Celebration of Diversity, Opening Access, Relevance,
and Excellence”. The CORE Mission Statement defines and then
institutes a University Studies Liberal Art Core Program and a High
School to College Bridge Program in Liberal Arts Studies. The two
programs are then integrated as a seamless opening of access to higher
education for underserved student populations. A web
technology-based infrastructure will support recruitment and retention
goals.
Justification
National educational policy recognizes the importance of skill
remediation services for entering freshman, particularly in analytic
reasoning, communication skills and common awareness of political and
historic traditions.
“This
Panel, diverse in experience, expertise, and philosophy, agrees broadly
that the delivery system in mathematics education—the system that
translates mathematical knowledge into value and ability for the next
generation—is broken and must be fixed. This is not a conclusion about
teachers or school administrators, or textbooks or universities or any
other single element of the system. It is about how the many parts do
not now work together to achieve a result worthy of this country’s
values and ambitions.” March 2008
It is in the strategic interest of any institution of higher learning
to develop a complete solution to the remediation crisis. There is a
recognized budgetary need to achieve additional recruitment and
retention. There is also relevance to the mission statement of the
institution. The central question to be answered with the CORE program
has to do with the capacity to solve what is now a perceived as an
unsolvable problem by altering the approach made to that problem.
In the United States, the capacity of each institution of higher
learning is oriented towards a mission aligned with modernization of
programs, such as a renewed focus on liberal education. Growth
industries like health care, pharmaceutical research, decentralization
technology all require an increased performance at the freshman
level. However, mathematics performance from entering freshmen
presents an unmet challenge. This challenge is to be met with a
comprehensive approach based on experience, system theory and learning
theory.
The strategic interest of each institution of higher learning is
replicated across the American educational system. As a
consequence each is in a position to take a leadership role in a number
of areas. These areas of leadership may be delineated in the CORE
mission statement. This mission statement delineates positive
steps designed to enhance four CORE principles.
1) Celebration of Diversity: Creating increased
diversity within the college and university system
2) Opening Access: Opening of access to all incoming
freshman students to a understanding about the nature of mathematics
3) Relevance: Restoring a sense of relevance by
restructuring curriculum and expectations
4) Excellence: Entering freshman should perceive a
personal opportunity to participate in excellence
Our, proposed, CORE mission statement is to be used in initial fund
raising and program development sufficient to find national recognition
for leadership within the twenty-first century community of colleges
and universities. This program will be developed at one
college or university while extending collaboration to more than one
other institution. The five-year plan is detailed in the last
section of this paper.
Long-term funding-raising will seek traditional support from private
foundations, as well a specific proposal to Congress and the White
House. The final proposal will be advanced as part of a larger
consortium of community colleges, colleges and universities.
Next steps
Innovation and purpose are the two hallmarks of leadership.
Purpose is reflected in the College Mission Statement, and in all
programs undertaken by the administration and faculty. The author
is seeking a college position where he may provide team leadership in
each of several areas. A Quality Enhancement Plan (QEP) that
focuses on the freshman experience will further demonstrate CORE
leadership. Funding proposals to NSF and to the Department of
Education will seek external funds to build the CORE prototype and
demonstrate functional success. As for the academic year
2008-2009, the author needs some time to develop funding proposals; as
well as to produce some advanced research results related to the
grounding of the lifting pedagogy and learning theory in natural
science. Planning will focus on the academic
year 2009-2010.
Underlying assertion of the CORE
Mission Statement
It is proposed that underserved students accommodate a cycle of failure
with respect to university studies. A number of scholars point
out that our schools and popular culture reinforces this cycle of
failure. In the proposed Bridge and Freshman Studies Programs,
this assertion is taken seriously. Adequate resources are used
directly with the expectation that the cycle of failure may be set
aside, in almost all cases. Given a change in approach, and
marked increased in success, the result will be more and better
students.
Innovation in pedagogy and curriculum
The author has proposed a specific innovation in pedagogy and
curriculum for developmental studies in mathematics. In his prior
work on Quality Enhancement Programs, as Chair of Mathematics at a
small HBCU in Alabama (2007-2008), a recommendation was made that a
core curriculum be identified for developmental purposes. He
proposed, in part, that a core developmental program should have
elements from mathematics, English communication skills, and the
humanities. There is agreement about this part of the proposal.
The proposed innovation in pedagogy and actual curriculum is where some
work is needed.
Lessons learned from other University
Studies Programs
Mathematics remediation is a profound problem. Freshman Studies
Programs at several universities actually remove analytic skills from
the mission statement of the program. The phrase “analytic
skills” is used, but developmental mathematics and freshman mathematics
are still taught by the department of mathematics using traditional
methods. The unsolvable part of the problem is left in the status
quo. A new strategy comes with an innovation in pedagogy and
curriculum designed to alter this status quo.
The school system and the college/university system are not on the same
page. University departments of mathematics are focused in
providing a quality presentation of higher mathematics, and in
advancing the body of mathematics. Mathematics education has
found a place within the universities but has not as yet found a
paradigm that recognizes a solution to the problems of poor and under
preparation. As a result of these considerations I believe that
the developmental program should be separated from the departments of
mathematics, as a general principle. It should be clear that the
approach I am making requires faculty development and training as well
as in-class and web based support materials. The developmental
program should produce students prepared to advance into mathematics
and sciences, with renewed interest and capacity.
Opening Access to underserved
populations
The second CORE principle is that of opening access to higher education
for underserved student populations. Academic communities agree
that English communication skill and the humanities is an essential
part of opening access to scholarship in all disciplines. There
is some disagreement, caused by frustration; over whether mathematics,
as traditionally taught in the freshman year, is relevant to the
current generation of students. This disagreement is exceedingly
complex and should be by-passed through a strategy appeasing both sides
of the disagreement.
The author has defined and demonstrated what is called the “
Lifting
Strategy”. The lifting pedagogy asserts
that an “Acquired Learning Disability” constrains the behavior of
entering freshman students and that a full remediation is possible in
almost all cases. The lifting pedagogy has two phases, engagement
followed by acceleration.
As demonstrated in the academic year 2007-2008, the pedagogy and
curriculum innovations in the lifting pedagogy may be applied to all
entering freshman students who fail to pass the standardized
mathematics placement exam. It was demonstrated that as
much as 30% of entering freshman, placed into developmental
mathematics, may be moved to standard college liberal arts studies
after the first three weeks of class. During the three weeks,
these students can be motivated by the opportunity to test out of
developmental mathematics, and be accelerated into the traditional
freshman course work. It is entirely possible that these students
have a radically improved chance of completing the freshman year and
going on to graduate.
On the prior experience
We may generalize from the experiences in 2007-2008. In this
academic year, at the small college in Alabama, we had 194 entering
freshman, 192 of which did not pass the mathematics entrance
exams. All students in all sections of developmental mathematics
as well as in the freshman college mathematics courses were given a
specific remediation curriculum, as discussed in “Institutionalizing
Developmental Curriculums” (IDC). A blank paper testing procedure
and lecture by topic presentation pedagogy is discussed in IDC.
For three weeks the two-professor department used testing and
presentation procedures uniformly. At the end of this three week
period all students earning an A on the blank paper test were
encouraged to drop his or her course and add a higher level mathematics
course. Of the 192 students, 63 made this change and went on the
make an A or B in the higher-level course.
The strategy created smaller developmental classes, while adding new
sections of the higher lever courses. Ideally, original
enrollment should be caped at 35 students; with the expectation that 10
will move out of this class. Students interested in the challenge
should leave open his or her schedule in alignment with classes that
will open only after the first three weeks.
The traditional retention rate at the small college was 20%. Over
the past decade, 80% of freshman students failed or dropped
mathematics. During the academic year 2007-2008 the retention
rate was 85% passing, most with a grade of A or B. This evidence
is applied to the conjecture that Acquired Learning Disability (ALD)
can be cured completely in most cases. Redoing this “experiment”
is necessary if outside funding is to be acquired.
Relationship to the proposed Education
Grid
In the five-part thesis “Transforming Mathematics Education” (Prueitt,
2008) the author places the Lifting Pedagogy into the context of supply
and demand models for economic, entertainment and educational systems.
“The creation of a not for profit communications grid for educational
processes was considered to be a reasonable social domain for
deployment of technology consistent with the new communications
paradigm. Funding is the only real issue. The author
developed the position that the application of this new paradigm to the
entire educational system might be funded as a single federal program.
Because of his work on this technology, the author is able to use the
principles developed to advance a learning theory, and supporting web
based technology. This is regarded as a first step in proposing
this communications grid, now called the Education Grid.
“There is no under-estimation of the difficulties. What we have
is a principled plan that starts with the development of a web based
support system for the bridge between high school and college.
This bridge will not use the software paradigm discussed below and is
thus not dependant on market forces finding the necessary
capitalization. The bridge will be designed
programmatically.”
Funding for a commercial enterprise whose focus is back-plate
technology is a task that faces a number of barriers. The
author’s five-year plan for developing the bridge program between high
school and college does not depend on such a commercial
enterprise. The author is an advisor to those who are most likely
to create this enterprise, but his work stands on its own merit.
The use of architectural principles in the web component of the bridge
program will illustrate the back-plate principles, but only as an
approximation.
Tentative Benchmarks for the Bridge
Program
The author is considering three positions for the academic year
2008-2009 and beyond. Three plan of action and management
scenarios are developed based on the three contexts. The first
appointment would be at a progressive community college already looking
forward to the task of curriculum and mission modification as community
colleges continue to fulfill an historic role in liberal education and
preparation of the work force. The appointment would be as
Director of the Mathematics and Sciences Division. The second
appointment would be as an Associate Professor at a rural university
having demographics similar to the small black college in Alabama where
the author was chair for one year. The third appointment would be
as Director of Developmental Mathematics Studies at a quality community
college close to Oklahoma City.
Scenario I: Director of Developmental Studies in Mathematics at a
quality community college. This position is the ideal position
for the next step in developing the bridge program prototype at a
single institution. The college has recognized that developmental
studies requires an administrator having sole responsibility for
addressing the learning challenges facing 75% of an entering freshman
class of over 1400 students. A program has been established and
existing personal hired. As Director of this program, I will be
responsible for administration of the existing program during the
academic year 2008-2009, and for designing a 2009-2010 developmental
program with web based support. External funding will be needed
to produce the bridge program software infrastructure and to hire
sufficient and qualified faculty to teach using the lifting
pedagogy. This funding should be in place for the 2009-2010
academic year. The academic years 2010 – 2011 and 2011-2012 will
see the program mature. Recruitment and retention metrics will
support the development of a high quality transfer program where some
of the community college’s graduates will enter into four-year
programs. The Director will begin an evangelization process
involving conference presentations and publication of textbook
materials. At the end of the five year period, the program will
have been fully established and will serve recruiting and retention
objectives. The lifting pedagogy will be shown during the
academic year 2008-2009 in a series of three week mini-courses while
existing faculty are consulted.
Scenario II: Associate Professor at a small rural university.
This rural university is a quality historical black university, and
thus extends my effort to produce a national bridge program designed
specifically for underserved student populations. Many of the
same issues exist as exist at the two small HBCUs I served in academic
years 1993-1994 and 2007-2008. However, the physical structure
and rural placement of the university is personally comfortable, as is
the opportunity to teach advanced undergraduate courses, and graduate
courses in mathematics education and computing science. Research
opportunities exists that would support my work on semantic extraction
from natural language, distributed computing, and formal models of
biological processes (using stochastic theory along with switching
networks and artificial neural networks). Finding external
funding would be facilitated. As an Associate Professor I will
depend on the Chair for assignments this next academic year, and would
focus on basic research elements to be used to justify my call for
external funding starting in academic year 2009-2010. Depending
on the interests of the entire faculty and administration, I would work
to build the bridge program as an interdisciplinary recruitment and
retention tool for the university. My goal would be to create the
position of Academic Vice President for Developmental Studies and to
serve in this position until retirement.
Scenario III: Division Director Mathematics and Science at a quality
community college outside a small city in the mid west. This
position would bring me to an administrative position where issues are
related to change theory, leadership models, meeting with unions,
faculty development and hiring. The key issue here is the
willingness of the existing faculty to look seriously at the lifting
pedagogy. The Division has all of the hard sciences as well as a
few other technology and trade programs. The support from
mathematics and computing science of these programs would be more
deeply justified, as would proposed-changes in the liberal arts core
requirements. The bridge program would be designed to support
community college specific programs, and to extend to a transfer
program designed to move some students into four-year institutions
after the Associates Degree. A web based student management
system would be developed and linked to a Blackboard system. The
most exciting aspect of this opportunity would be in researching best
practices related to the services that academic vice presidents, deans
and chairman are expected to support. A model of interactions
involving administrative functions would be lifted to web based process
models, and generalized as part of the author’s long time interests in
the emerging service standard for educational processes.
Dr Paul S Prueitt, Talladega Alabama June 2008