1 / 25

Advancing Capstone Learning at LaGuardia

Advancing Capstone Learning at LaGuardia. 1 October 2010 Rethinking the Capstone Experience Seminar J. Elizabeth Clark. Methodology & Research. Faculty Research Team. J . Elizabeth Clark, English Dept. Debra Engel, Physical Therapist Ass’t Program, NAS Dept.

niabi
Download Presentation

Advancing Capstone Learning at LaGuardia

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. Advancing Capstone Learning at LaGuardia 1 October 2010 Rethinking the Capstone Experience Seminar J. Elizabeth Clark

  2. Methodology & Research

  3. Faculty Research Team • J. Elizabeth Clark, English Dept. • Debra Engel, Physical Therapist Ass’t Program, NAS Dept. • Michael Napolitano, Chair, Business & Technology • James Richardson, New Media Technology, Humanities Dept. • Michael Rodriguez, Humanities/Fine Arts Program, Humanities Dept. • Carolyn Sterling-Deer, Education & Language Acquisition Dept.

  4. Additional Researchers • Bret Eynon, CTL • Craig Kasprzak, CTL

  5. 2008-2009: Cohort I 2009-2010: Cohort II 2008: Initial Research Year 2010-2011: Cohort III

  6. Research Methodology • Intensive Research Process • Literature Review, identifying best practices in the higher education • Research protocol • Web-based research process • Examining Case Studies • Identifying Best Practices • Interviewing Key Schools • White paper (report) produced & presented to Academic Chairs, circulated college-wide

  7. Seminal Capstone Literature • Cuseo, J.B. (1998). “Objectives and Benefits of Senior Year Programs.” • Durel, R.J. (1993). “The Capstone Course: A Rite of Passage.” • Gardner, J.N., & Van der Veer, G. (1998). The Senior Year Experience: Facilitating Integration, Reflection, Closure, and Transition • Henscheid, J. M., & Barnicoat, L. R. (2001).“Senior Capstone Courses in Higher Education.” • Henscheid, J.M., Breitmeyer, J.E., & Mercer, J.L. (2000). “Professing the Disciplines: An Analysis of Senior Seminars and Capstone Courses.”

  8. Community Colleges, Four Year Colleges & Universities Agnes Scott College (GA), Arizona State University, Austin Community College (TX), Boston College, Bryant University (RI), Case Western Reserve University (OH), California State University-Channel Islands, California State University-Northridge, Colby-Sawyer College (NH), Clemson University (SC), Colorado State University-Pueblo, Columbus State Community College (OH), Commonwealth College [University of Massachusetts-Amherst Honors Program], Community College of Baltimore-Dundalk, DePaul University (IL), Edison Community College (FL), Emporia State University – School of Library and Information Management (KS), Highland Community College (IL), Indiana University Purdue University-Indianapolis, Ithaca College (NY), Kennesaw State University (GA), Lakeland Community College (OH), Massachusetts College of Art & Design, Miami University of Ohio, Mount St. Mary’s (NY), New York University, Northeastern University (MA), Northwestern State University (LA), Pennsylvania State University, Philadelphia University, Portland State University (OR), Prince George's Community College (MD), Rhodes State College (OH), Salve Regina University (RI), San Francisco State University (CA), Skidmore College (NY), Southern Connecticut State University, St. Charles Community College (MO), St. Louis Community College (MO), St. Mary’s College (MD), Terra Community College (OH), Truman State College (MO), University of Delaware, University of Iowa, University of the Virgin Islands, University of Nevada-Reno, and Western Nebraska Community College.

  9. Interview Protocol

  10. Interview Protocol, cont’d

  11. Interview Protocol, cont’d

  12. Highlights:Key Findings

  13. Durel’s Definition The capstone course typically is defined as a crowning course or experience coming at the end of a sequence of courses with the specific objective of integrating a body of relatively fragmented knowledge into a unified whole. [T]his course provides an experience through which undergraduate students both look back over their undergraduate curriculum in an effort to make sense of that experience and look forward to professional life.

  14. Dominant Models: Disciplinary Based vs. Interdisciplinary • Portland State’s Capstone

  15. Cuseo’s List: Adapting for our Context • Promoting the coherence and relevance of general education • Promoting integration and connections between general education and the academic major • Promoting meaningful connections between the academic major and work (career) experiences • Improving students’ career preparation and pre­professional development, that is, facilitating their transition from the academic to the professional world (or to four year study)

  16. Capstones: For Students • Foster synthesis within the academic major • Promote connections between general education and the academic major • Explicitly develop important student skills initiated earlier in the college curriculum • Improve career preparation and facilitates the transition from academia to professional life • Enhance preparation for postgraduate education

  17. Capstones: For Faculty, Programs & the Institution Capstones provide crucial opportunities for comprehensive assessment. “By its very nature,” one recent study suggests, “the capstone course is a method of summative evaluation.” Such a course “not only assesses previous cognitive learning in the major, but also provides a forum that allows an instructor to assess the student’s overall collegiate experience” (Moore, 2005, p. 440).

  18. Gardner & Van der Veer • Integration • Reflection • Closure • Transition

  19. Integration

  20. Reflection

  21. Culmination

  22. Transition

  23. Capstone Pedagogy • Traditional Approaches: lectures, readings, discussions, and collaborative learning activities • Supportive Capstone Pedagogies: project based learning (including research projects), internships and service learning, and reflection

  24. Continued Research • 2 completed iterations of the Re-thinking the Capstone Experience Seminar to continue the learning; currently in the 3rd iteration • Capstone Fellows • Semester surveys/evaluations of courses, focus groups, institutional data (retention, grades, CCSSE comparative data) • LaGuardia’s National Making Connections Seminar • AAC&U Engaging Departments & General Education Institutes

More Related