4.16.24 21st Century Movements for Black Lives.pptx
USD Honors director presentation
1. Quality in Context: An Analysis of the Honors Program at The University of South Dakota Carol A. Leibiger, Ph.D., MSLIS Associate Professor Information Literacy Coordinator University Libraries
2. Who am I? Academic preparation Ph.D. in Germanic Linguistics and Older Germanic Literatures (U. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1985) M.S. in Library and Information Science (U. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1987) Experience at USD German Language, Literature, Linguistics, Teaching Methods, Honors English Literature, Honors Information Literacy, European Literature, Women’s Studies, Honors
3. Who am I? Honors courses taught Fantasy, Truth, & Perception (UHON 210) Women, Identity, and the Narrative Women of Ideas of the Nineteenth Century Evil Lurks Among Us (with Dennis Sjolie) Rings of Power/Roots & Branches Love Stinks! Library liaison to Honors (acquisitions, IL instruction in Honors English and Speech, UHON 211, and XDIS) Proud Honors parent
4. USD Context and Resources “strained economy forcing difficult budgetary decisions that often negatively impact higher education” “declining K–12 student populations…which impact[s] University recruitment strategies” Nearly 90% of faculty indicate that teaching is a top priority (2010) 70% of faculty rated “Excellent instructor” (2010)
5. The Honors Program’s Strengths: HLC Self-Study statements “Largest and most vibrant Honors Program in the state” “The University Honors Program provides ‘especially motivated, creative, and thoughtful students an enriched academic experience grounded in the liberal arts that promotes lifelong learning, responsibility in citizenship, effectiveness in vocation, and appreciation of culture, while enhancing the intellectual environment and community of the University.’” http://www.usd.edu/accreditation/chapter-6.cfm
6. The Honor’s Program’s Strengths Over 350 academically strong students (8% of student population) Average ACT: 28.9 Average HS GPA: 3.89 4-year graduation rate: almost 55% Over 20% of 2010 entering Freshmen ranked #1in their HS classes 79% of nationally competitive scholarship winners 27% of leadership positions in campus organizations
7. The Honor’s Program’s Strengths Traditional Honors curriculum Freshman: Honors English and Ideas in History Sophomore: Interdisciplinary Civilization I & II Junior: Honors seminars Senior: Honors thesis Innovations Sophomore mini-thesis Junior XDIS participation
8. The Honor’s Program’s Strengths Hardworking , dedicated Honors staff Director (50%) Assistant Director (65%) Director, Center for Academic Engagement (33%) Program Assistant I (100%) Honors faculty dedicated to excellent teaching Cadre of Honors English and UHON 210/211 faculty Honors seminars taught by credentialed faculty
9. The Honor’s Program’s Strengths: What Our Students Say Academic preparation: Provides resources to “balance the odds when competing against students from larger or better-resourced universities” Exposure to a variety of disciplines and ways of thinking takes students “above and beyond” “Mind-expanding” content and rigor of Honors seminars Seminars develop critical thinking and communication skills in speech and writing Mini-thesis and Honors thesis are preparation in disciplinary thinking and writing for graduate school and beyond
10. The Honor’s Program’s Strengths: What Our Students Say Social and intellectual involvement in a community of scholars: “By creating a community of students who are oriented towards engaging each other around ideas, you create a subculture…in which the social norm is intellectual curiosity and engagement.” Passionate instructors who “take students seriously as academics” and demonstrate that “academia is something that [can] be enjoyed.” “The Honors Lounge is an amazing perk.”
11. Challenges (from documents):Honors Standards NCHC, Basic Characteristics of a Fully Developed Honors Program Mission statement Instructional excellence Scalability (resources) Honors staff Honors faculty
12. Challenges (from documents):USD/Honors USD, The University of South Dakota Self-Study For Reaccreditation Diversity General USD issue Honors education issue Recruitment and retention as USD issues High-quality students High-quality faculty
13. Challenges: What Our Students Say “Honors should present uncompromising commitment to intellectual standards and a safe space where students can work hard and believe that they will be taken care of well by their mentors and the institution at large. The Honors Program HAS to lead this charge both in the eyes of the administration and in the mind of the student body. ”
14. Opportunities: Leading from WithinMission Statement Develop and display prominently a mission statement that aligns with USD’s articulated mission statement Articulate goals and objectives of the Honors curriculum Utilize current USD assessment focus, personnel, and process to assess the Honors Program Utilize the assessment findings as “talking points” for in-house structural, curricular, and funding enhancement Utilize the mission statement as a communication tool for marketing, fundraising, etc.
15. Opportunities: Leading from WithinInstructional Excellence Promote interdisciplinarity and academic rigor in a developmental Honors curriculum Freshman sequence should “hook” students with both skills and knowledge building as well as stimulating content Sophomore sequence should introduce students to interdisciplinarity Honors seminars should be uniformly rigorous and truly interdisciplinary XDIS should be integrated into the Honors curriculum Honors sophomore and major curricula culminate in the mini-thesis and Honors thesis, respectively
16. Opportunities: Leading from WithinInstructional Excellence Promote instructional excellence and pedagogical experimentation, and market success Feature USD’s best faculty (e.g., Belbas-Larson Award winners prioritized for Honors instruction) Evaluate courses and faculty not just on content, but on pedagogy Make Honors courses the locus of experimental instructional design Extend successful courses to non-Honors students Publicize successes in course building and pedagogy
17. Opportunities: Leading from WithinScalability of Personnel Resources Scalability of instruction and administration Investigate administrative workload sharing with GAs and internships Introduce efficiencies into Honors seminars Utilize Honors staff as seminar faculty Allow greater flexibility in contracting Honors seminars (e.g., graduate courses) Allow one contracted Honors seminar for investigation of likely Honors thesis projects (with thesis proposal /introductory chapter as required end product)
18. Opportunities: Leading from WithinDiversity, Recruitment, Retention Honors can lead in promoting an “intellectual environment that fosters…recruitment of the best students and faculty” for USD Enhance diversity by recruitment and retention of bright, ambitious minority students Initiate mentoring of all Honors students by upperclassmen, faculty, and alumni Tie high-achieving students and alumni to USD via post-grad Honors relationships Market Honors research via an Institutional Repository Promote (minority) faculty recruitment and retention Initiate mentoring of new Honors faculty by Honors staff and experienced faculty
20. Questions? This presentation is available on Slideshare: http://www.slideshare.net/cleibige/usd-honors-director-presentation To continue the conversation, please contact me: Carol Leibiger 130 B I.D. Weeks Library Bldg. C.Leibiger@usd.edu 677-6089