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Concerns with how students are taught, and whether and how they
learn, has become particularly salient in higher education. This is
evident in growing awareness of increases in time-to-degree and
declines in attainment rates for many students, including those who
are underrepresented, in our nation's community and public and
private colleges and universities. It is also demonstrated
vis-a-vis recent findings that more than a third of college
students evinced no noticeable improvement in critical thinking,
writing, and complex reasoning skills after four years as an
undergraduate. These findings suggest that while a focus on access
to and participation in the nation's colleges and universities
remain a prominent goal, it is no longer sufficient given
persistent disparities in post secondary student learning. There
are a few models however, from which we can distill a set of
strategies for promoting not only high achievement, but also
retention and completion rates. This book examines three such
models in higher education - the Meyerhoff Scholars Program at the
University of Maryland, Baltimore County; the Opportunity Programs
at Skidmore College in Saratoga Springs, New York; and the
Premedical Program at Xavier University in New Orleans - with a
proven record of student achievement and completion.
Concerns with how students are taught, and whether and how they
learn, has become particularly salient in higher education. This is
evident in growing awareness of increases in time-to-degree and
declines in attainment rates for many students, including those who
are underrepresented, in our nation's community and public and
private colleges and universities. It is also demonstrated
vis-a-vis recent findings that more than a third of college
students evinced no noticeable improvement in critical thinking,
writing, and complex reasoning skills after four years as an
undergraduate. These findings suggest that while a focus on access
to and participation in the nation's colleges and universities
remain a prominent goal, it is no longer sufficient given
persistent disparities in post secondary student learning. There
are a few models however, from which we can distill a set of
strategies for promoting not only high achievement, but also
retention and completion rates. This book examines three such
models in higher education - the Meyerhoff Scholars Program at the
University of Maryland, Baltimore County; the Opportunity Programs
at Skidmore College in Saratoga Springs, New York; and the
Premedical Program at Xavier University in New Orleans - with a
proven record of student achievement and completion.
The process of probing beneath and even shaving or sanding away the
language undergirding literary works that, word by word, line by
line and page by page, sustains a narrative's arc, contributes to
the perspective of writer as architect. For it not only positions,
but also reinforces the significance of line, mass, texture,
balance, scale and proportion in a new world, a created structure
and the spaces that organize it, that if expertly executed, endures
over time.
Promoting Global Competence and Social Justice in Teacher Education
reconceptualizes the purpose of education to include the attainment
of global or cosmopolitan perspectives. This goal has important
implications for how we not only educate today's students, but also
how we prepare teachers to teach in a diverse and complex world in
which habits of perspective, inquiry, imagination, empathy,
communication, commitment, humility, integrity, and judgment
increasingly resonate in importance. This book advocates for
preparing teacher candidates to acquire a nuanced, global
perspective of their subject areas and be prepared to handle the
demands of educating students for our changing global context. To
this end, Promoting Global Competence and Social Justice in Teacher
Education encourages the development of pedagogical strategies that
will enable students to consider multiple perspectives and
cultivate respect for diverse peoples and cultures.
According to Gordon and Bridglall, the ability to learn is more of
a developed human capacity than a fixed aptitude with which one is
born. They argue that the emergence of academic ability is
associated with exposure to specialized cultures that privilege the
attitudes, knowledge, and skills that schools reward. Children who
are born to and raised in these cultures tend to do well in school,
while those who are not exposed to such cultures tend seldom rise
to high levels of academic achievement. Through a collection of
interesting essays, Affirmative Development: Cultivating Academic
Ability attempts to address how we can deliberately develop
academic ability in those children who are not raised under
conditions that predispose them to develop high levels of academic
ability.
According to Gordon and Bridglall, the ability to learn is more of
a developed human capacity than a fixed aptitude with which one is
born. They argue that the emergence of academic ability is
associated with exposure to specialized cultures that privilege the
attitudes, knowledge, and skills that schools reward. Children who
are born to and raised in these cultures tend to do well in school,
while those who are not exposed to such cultures tend seldom rise
to high levels of academic achievement. Through a collection of
interesting essays, Affirmative Development: Cultivating Academic
Ability attempts to address how we can deliberately develop
academic ability in those children who are not raised under
conditions that predispose them to develop high levels of academic
ability.
Promoting Global Competence and Social Justice in Teacher Education
reconceptualizes the purpose of education to include the attainment
of global or cosmopolitan perspectives. This goal has important
implications for how we not only educate today's students, but also
how we prepare teachers to teach in a diverse and complex world in
which habits of perspective, inquiry, imagination, empathy,
communication, commitment, humility, integrity, and judgment
increasingly resonate in importance. This book advocates for
preparing teacher candidates to acquire a nuanced, global
perspective of their subject areas and be prepared to handle the
demands of educating students for our changing global context. To
this end, Promoting Global Competence and Social Justice in Teacher
Education encourages the development of pedagogical strategies that
will enable students to consider multiple perspectives and
cultivate respect for diverse peoples and cultures.
COVID-19 has exposed and exacerbated entrenched inequities spawned
by the historical and structural reality of bigotry, prejudice,
discrimination, and inequity in all forms, and at institutional and
individual levels. It is perceived that higher education
institutions also perpetuates these inequities, which is fuelled by
prevailing misconceptions, such as "college should be limited to
the privileged few"; or that "community colleges are in some way
'inferior'." Recognizing Promise re-establishes the role community
colleges can play in reversing centuries of racial and gender
disparities in economic wealth, health, education, and life
expectancy stemming from current and historical policies and
practices that sustain structural racism. The result is a more
civic-minded, educated citizenry and a stronger workforce of
tomorrow. Educators in the community college space, in partnership
with business, industry and philanthropic leaders, can lead the way
in reasserting commitment toward eradicating racism and sustaining
reform that advocates inclusive excellence, educational access and
programmatic diversity, and the alignment of learning with
opportunities in the workplace.
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