The Learning Paradigm College
Book Review of The Learning Paradigm College by John Tagg, Anker Publishing Company, Inc., 2003, 379 pages, ISBN 1-882982-58-4. Reviewed by Sandra L. Kortesoja. A book by one of the authors in this issue of Planning argues that changing students will be demanding more change of instructional styles than we yet realize.Read the entire review here. Use the commenting functionality in this blog to comment or share your own opinion, or suggest related good books. Labels: change, phe, student life, student services, v37n1
The Inheritance of Millenial Students: What They will Inherit from their Campus Experience — What Legacy Will They Leave
Students need to see examples from society’s leaders of actions to address urgent sustainability challenges in order to motivate them to take actions of their own.Read the full article here. Then use this blog's capability to comment or share additional, related resources. Thanks. Millennial students can be inspired to create a legacy for future generations by the recognizable actions of campus planners to create more sustainable campuses through smart growth planning, green buildings, transportation planning, and energy- and water-efficiency retrofits. This article describes policies, programs, and projects at The University of British Columbia; presents student concerns about the future and their reactions to campus initiatives in sustainability, and discusses recent research regarding student responses to green buildings on campuses in Canada. From the October–November–December 2008 issue of Planning for Higher Education, this "SCUP Links Blog" post provides an opportunity for you to share comments or additional resources/links about the focus of the article, The Inheritance of Millenial Students: What They will Inherit from their Campus Experience — What Legacy Will They Leave, v37n1, pp. PAGES, by AUTHORS. You can read the entire article here. Note that this issue of Planning is the first of a two-part themed volume with the overall title, Student Life. The second part will be published in January 2009. Assembled, the two parts will be available in late January 2009 for purchase as a single PDF document for your quick and easy reference. Labels: demographics, phe, student life, student services, students, v37n1
The Inheritance of Millenial Students: What They will Inherit from their Campus Experience — What Legacy Will They Leave
Students need to see examples from society’s leaders of actions to address urgent sustainability challenges in order to motivate them to take actions of their own.Read the full article here. Then use this blog's capability to comment or share additional, related resources. Thanks. Millennial students can be inspired to create a legacy for future generations by the recognizable actions of campus planners to create more sustainable campuses through smart growth planning, green buildings, transportation planning, and energy- and water-efficiency retrofits. This article describes policies, programs, and projects at The University of British Columbia; presents student concerns about the future and their reactions to campus initiatives in sustainability, and discusses recent research regarding student responses to green buildings on campuses in Canada. From the October–November–December 2008 issue of Planning for Higher Education, this "SCUP Links Blog" post provides an opportunity for you to share comments or additional resources/links about the focus of the article, The Inheritance of Millenial Students: What They will Inherit from their Campus Experience — What Legacy Will They Leave, v37n1, pp. 49–58, by Freda Pagani. You can read the entire article here. Note that this issue of Planning is the first of a two-part themed volume with the overall title, Student Life. The second part will be published in January 2009. Assembled, the two parts will be available in late January 2009 for purchase as a single PDF document for your quick and easy reference. Labels: demographics, phe, student life, student services, students, v37n1
Colleges and Universities Want to be Your Friend: Communicating via Online Social Networking
Like it or not, communicating via online social networking sites is what millions of young people do each day.Read the full article here. Then use this blog's capability to comment or share additional, related resources. Thanks. This article presents a compilation of data regarding the role of online social networks within campus communities, specifically for nonacademic purposes. Both qualitative and quantitative data methodologies are used to provide a unique perspective on a constantly evolving topic. Interviews of students and administrators allow for candid discussion, while primary and secondary data offer an understanding of current use and trends within the realm of online social networking. Theories of self-esteem and interpersonal communication are integrated throughout the article. From the October–November–December 2008 issue of Planning for Higher Education, this "SCUP Links Blog" post provides an opportunity for you to share comments or additional resources/links about the focus of the article, Colleges and Universities Want to be Your Friend: Communicating via Online Social Networking, v37n1, pp. 35–48, by Tamara L. Wandel. You can read the entire article here. Note that this issue of Planning is the first of a two-part themed volume with the overall title, Student Life. The second part will be published in January 2009. Assembled, the two parts will be available in late January 2009 for purchase as a single PDF document for your quick and easy reference. Labels: demographics, phe, student life, student services, students, v37n1
Let’s Hear from Students
Since this issue is all about students, we thought you might like to hear from some.Read the full article here. Then use this blog's capability to comment or share additional, related resources. Thanks. This special two-part series on student life would not be complete without a student perspective. What do real, live, individual students from the Net generation think, experience, dream, and plan? Are they as “wired in” as Mark Milliron describes in his article? Is communication strongly linked to technology as outlined by Tamara Wandel? How do student characteristics affect teaching and student learning (John Tagg), student services (Simone Himbeault Taylor), and a student’s overall college experience (Freda Pagani)? From the October–November–December 2008 issue of Planning for Higher Education, this "SCUP Links Blog" post provides an opportunity for you to share comments or additional resources/links about the focus of the article, Let's Hear From Students, v37n1, pp. 32–34, by Claire L. Turcotte. You can read the entire article here. Note that this issue of Planning is the first of a two-part themed volume with the overall title, Student Life. The second part will be published in January 2009. Assembled, the two parts will be available in late January 2009 for purchase as a single PDF document for your quick and easy reference. Labels: demographics, phe, student life, student services, students, v37n1
What's Past is Prologue: The Evolving Paradigms of Student Affairs
Is the traditional framework for student services getting creaky? Consider these varied paradigms within which to plan the future of student services.Read the full article here. Then use this blog's capability to comment or share additional, related resources. Thanks. The purpose of this article is to frame—and reframe—the work of student affairs. Evolving paradigms have defined and advanced this work, which is dedicated to total student development and the betterment of society. The article promotes integrative learning as a new framework for student affairs. This paradigm, grounded in theory, research, and practice, crosses all boundaries of what, where, how, and with whom learning occurs to advance cohesive and synergistic student-centered learning. To live into this seamless model, student affairs professionals must go beyond the “what” to living into the “so what” of their work as educators and reflective practitioners. From the October–November–December 2008 issue of Planning for Higher Education, this "SCUP Links Blog" post provides an opportunity for you to share comments or additional resources/links about the focus of the article, What's Past is Prologue: The Evolving Paradigms of Student Affairs, v37n1, pp. 23–34, by Simone Himbeault Taylor. You can read the entire article here. Note that this issue of Planning is the first of a two-part themed volume with the overall title, Student Life. The second part will be published in January 2009. Assembled, the two parts will be available in late January 2009 for purchase as a single PDF document for your quick and easy reference. Labels: demographics, graduate students, phe, student life, student services, v37n1
Changing Minds in Higher Education: Students Change, So Why Can't Colleges?
Click here to comment on this PHE article!The problem today is that when students change, colleges don't have to because they camouflage and conceal the evidence that could guide change.Read the full article here. Then use this blog's capability to comment or share additional, related resources. Thanks. College students have changed dramatically, and the skills needed for productive employment have changed as well. But colleges and universities have been slow to respond, often innovating in only small ways while leaving the core practices of undergraduate education the same. This article examines the barriers to transformational change in higher education in five categories: structure, information, incentives, finance, and culture. It suggests that the initial approach to overcoming these barriers involves generating better information in the form of feedback concerning student learning processes and outcomes. From the October–November–December 2008 issue of Planning for Higher Education, this "SCUP Links Blog" post provides an opportunity for you to share comments or additional resources/links about the focus of the article, Changing Minds in Higher Education: Students Change, So Why Can't Colleges?, v37n1, pp. 15–22, by John Tagg. You can read the entire article here. Note that this issue of Planning is the first of a two-part themed volume with the overall title, Student Life. The second part will be published in January 2009. Assembled, the two parts will be available in late January 2009 for purchase as a single PDF document for your quick and easy reference. Please share your comments or links to related resources.Labels: change, demographics, graduate students, phe, student life, student services, v37n1
Building a New Generation of Learning: Conversations to Catalyze Our Conversation
Our newest generation of learners: If we build it, they will come; if we build it well, they—in the broadest sense of the word—will learn.Read the full article here. Then use this blog's capability to comment or share additional, related resources. Thanks. Rather than focus primarily on the next generation of learners, the authors argue we are best served to focus on building out our on-ground and online infrastructures for a new generation of learning—blending multiple learning modes, technologies, and techniques over the course of the next 15–20 years to serve the diverse array of students from multiple generations that will be coming our way. They offer seven catalytic conversations to start this process on the topics of blended learning, mobility, gaming, social networking, holographics, analytics, and a renewed focus on the human touch. From the October–November–December 2008 issue of Planning for Higher Education, this "SCUP Links Blog" post provides an opportunity for you to share comments or additional resources/links about the focus of the article, Building or a New Generation of Learning, v37n1, pp. 7–14, by Mark David Milliron, Kathleen Plinske, and Coral Noonan-Terry. You can read the entire article here. Note that this issue of Planning is the first of a two-part themed volume with the overall title, Student Life. The second part will be published in January 2009. Assembled, the two parts will be available in late January 2009 for purchase as a single PDF document for your quick and easy reference. Labels: demographics, graduate students, phe, student life, student services, v37n1
'Millennial' or 'Net Generation' Students and Their Impact on the Development of Student-Centered Facilities
This is the first of two themed issues of SCUP's journal that examine both the evolving student and the changing learning and living experience. This first issue focuses on key questions surrounding today's students: What do we know about them? What can we observe in their lifestyle and learning tendencies that would have an impact on learning experience design perspective? In the second issue, we will investigate how higher education institutions are responding to these changes. . . . To accomplish this purpose, we strive first to create a broad understanding of this context of change. We then explore the changes in programs, physical facilities, and environment that have and are being planned in response to these trends.
Read the full article here. Then use this blog's capability to comment or share additional, related resources. Thanks.
From the October–November–December 2008 issue of Planning for Higher Education, this "SCUP Links Blog" post provides an opportunity for you to share comments or additional resources/links about the focus of the article, 'Millennial' or 'Net Generation' Students and Their Impact on the Development of Student-Centered Facilities, v37n1, pp. 5-6, by John A. Ruffo. You can read the entire article here. It is an introduction, by Guest Editor John Ruffo, to the overall concept of this two-part, themed issue of Planning. Note that this issue of Planning is the first of a two-part themed volume with the overall title, Student Life. The second part will be published in January 2009. Assembled, the two parts will be available in late January 2009 for purchase as a single PDF document for your quick and easy reference. Labels: demographics, Millennials, Net Generation, phe, student life, student services, students, v37n1
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