1 / 15

The Evolution of the Common Core Reader

The Evolution of the Common Core Reader . A Work in Progress. Suzanne M. Deschênes , PhD April 16, 2012 Presented at: The Lilly Network Exchange:  The Human Journey Core Sacred Heart University . A brief history…. The reader was conceived…

moshe
Download Presentation

The Evolution of the Common Core Reader

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Evolution of the Common Core Reader A Work in Progress Suzanne M. Deschênes, PhD April 16, 2012 • Presented at: • The Lilly Network Exchange:  The Human Journey Core • Sacred Heart University

  2. A brief history… • The reader was conceived… • In ~2006, title selected: “Common Core Reader on the Catholic Intellectual Tradition” • approved by University Academic Assembly • 2011: reader is substantial enough for in-house use and evaluation; work in progress

  3. Content conundrums… • Title: “Common Core Reader on the Catholic Intellectual Tradition” • What was the original intent for the nature of the Reader? • Should the current name of this reader be revised to reflect its content, Catholic or otherwise? Or, should we confine ourselves to the title’s implied intent? • What is the CIT?

  4. Content conundrums… • Who decides what is consistent with the CIT? • What criteria should be used to select readings for the Reader? • Catholic authors only? • Explicitly Catholic? • How “Catholic” is Catholic? i.e., how “orthodox” must the readings be? • Will the Reader be prescriptive for instructors, i.e., must all readings for common core courses come from the Reader? Critical for faculty buy-in…

  5. Content solutions… • Title issues: keep title, be flexible on content • What is the CIT?Reader will contain an Introduction that provides both short and long definitions of the CIT • Who selects readings? Representative faculty from each discipline • Criteria for readings? CIT ≠ orthodox; CIT is broad and encompasses a diversity of thought and philosophies; readings must “engage” the CIT; don’t have to be Catholic authors

  6. Content solutions… • Prescriptive?No! Foreword containing this explanation: A resource book for profs to • increase their own understanding of the CIT • recommend additional readings to students • supplement readings already used in their courses • interrogate from a different disciplinary perspective the works they are using and which might be in the reader already • enjoy interdisciplinary interactions with other common core instructors

  7. Format • Annotated list of readings, or • Annotations and very short excerpts from readings to stimulate interest and further exploration ( e.g., St. Thomas Univ. reader), or • Longer reader containing annotations and lengthier excerpts (e.g., book chapters, articles, essays, etc.)

  8. Format - Specifics For each represented discipline: 1. A reading selection that offers a perspective on what it means to practice integration of the CIT in the discipline (e.g., on being a Catholic writer, on being a Catholic biologist) 2. Reading selections a. Annotation b. Discussion questions c. Excerpt (suggested 10 page max)

  9. Organization 1. In main body of reader: by discipline 2. Indices: - chronological - four common core questions - CIT characteristics

  10. Disciplines College of Arts & Sciences • History • English • Art • Music • Social sciences • Natural sciences • Etc. Welch College of Business College of Health Professions

  11. Dissemination • Secure campus online site • Soft-cover reader • External publication

  12. Collecting the Readings • A long journey…

  13. Online organization…

  14. Online organization…

  15. Example of annotated readings (source + commentary)

More Related