Difference between revisions of "Keck-presentation"

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II) Why Earlham (Charlie 15 min)
 
II) Why Earlham (Charlie 15 min)
 +
Notes
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*re-read grant RFP
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*re-read grant proposal
 +
*paul's one pager on the history of student/faculty research at earlham
 +
*timed run-through
 +
 +
Why Earlham?
 +
*How much time spent with small liberal arts colleges?  Answer dictates level of coverage in different parts of what follows.
 +
 +
*Tension between Quaker modesty and our desire to put the best facia on our college and our people.
 +
 +
*Overview of Earlham
 +
**1847, Quakers were a large portion of the early settlers to this area
 +
**Liberal arts with masters in teaching and seminaries
 +
**Quaker
 +
***Governance
 +
***Student/faculty interactions
 +
**Teaching first and formost
 +
 +
*Student Body
 +
**International
 +
**Diversity (science in particular)
 +
***Efforts to improve enrollments in STEM disciplines
 +
**Selectivity
 +
**Curriculum
 +
***liberal arts, distribution requirements (new language)
 +
***science a part of everyone's course of study
 +
****actual details of the requirements
 +
****more below on our majors
 +
 +
*Science division
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**our cohesiveness and collective strength
 +
***multidisc exp
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**major strength to PhD
 +
***particular departments
 +
***overlap w/ major/minors
 +
**student/faculty research experience (history, current)
 +
**Computational Experience
 +
***Folding@Home
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***Computational Economics
 +
***LittleFe and SC Education
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**Instrumentation and Experience
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**Pedagogical creativity experience
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*Closing
  
 
III) Why Project (Ron 10 min)
 
III) Why Project (Ron 10 min)
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undergraduate research, curricular use of computational modeling and  
 
undergraduate research, curricular use of computational modeling and  
 
interdisciplinary projects
 
interdisciplinary projects
 
 
 
  
 
V) Why Keck (Lori 5 min)
 
V) Why Keck (Lori 5 min)
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• Keck support would also raise the visibility of the sciences regionally and nationally.
 
• Keck support would also raise the visibility of the sciences regionally and nationally.
 
 
 
 
Wrap-up: Review, questions, tour next (Mike 5 min)
 
Wrap-up: Review, questions, tour next (Mike 5 min)

Revision as of 14:18, 24 September 2006

I) Who we are (Mike 5 min)

II) Why Earlham (Charlie 15 min) Notes

  • re-read grant RFP
  • re-read grant proposal
  • paul's one pager on the history of student/faculty research at earlham
  • timed run-through

Why Earlham?

  • How much time spent with small liberal arts colleges? Answer dictates level of coverage in different parts of what follows.
  • Tension between Quaker modesty and our desire to put the best facia on our college and our people.
  • Overview of Earlham
    • 1847, Quakers were a large portion of the early settlers to this area
    • Liberal arts with masters in teaching and seminaries
    • Quaker
      • Governance
      • Student/faculty interactions
    • Teaching first and formost
  • Student Body
    • International
    • Diversity (science in particular)
      • Efforts to improve enrollments in STEM disciplines
    • Selectivity
    • Curriculum
      • liberal arts, distribution requirements (new language)
      • science a part of everyone's course of study
        • actual details of the requirements
        • more below on our majors
  • Science division
    • our cohesiveness and collective strength
      • multidisc exp
    • major strength to PhD
      • particular departments
      • overlap w/ major/minors
    • student/faculty research experience (history, current)
    • Computational Experience
      • Folding@Home
      • Computational Economics
      • LittleFe and SC Education
    • Instrumentation and Experience
    • Pedagogical creativity experience
  • Closing

III) Why Project (Ron 10 min)

IV) What Project (50 min total)

  • Goals and Objectives Mike (5 min), or as part of Why Project
  • Courses (Mike 5 min)
    • Intro: Gen Chem (Mike 10 min)
    • Upper: Geology (Ron 10 min)
  • Break
  • Research: Biology (David 10 min)
  • Seminars (Meg 5 min)
  • Dissemination/Evaluation (Lori 5 min)

Dissemination activities will include:

• NITLE workshop on integrating multi-disciplinary computational methods into the undergraduate science curriculum. We have already arranged with the National Institute for Technology and Liberal Education (NITLE) to offer a workshop for our peers where we will describe what we have done and offer suggestions for how similar programs can be implemented at their institutions.

• Earlham Science Poster Session (held each Fall)

• Student presentation of papers at regional and national scientific conferences (Butler Undergraduate Research Conference, Geological Society of America, American Chemical Society, etc).

• CUR publications and programs

• Student/Faculty papers in science pedagogy journals and basic science journals, as appropriate.

Evaluation will include:

• External evaluation both during and at the conclusion of the grant period

• Qualitative evaluation: open-ended surveys, interviews

• Quantitative evaluation: quantitative surveys, pre and post grant levels of undergraduate research, curricular use of computational modeling and interdisciplinary projects

V) Why Keck (Lori 5 min)

Why Keck:

• Long tradition of supporting curricular innovation: Funding for undergraduate research at small liberal arts colleges is limited. The W.M. Keck Foundation is known and respected throughout the scientific community as a foundation that supports innovative science programs at high-quality libral arts institutions.

• Limited sources of support for such a comprehensive multidisciplinary program: Most sources support only limited interdisciplinary work (bio and chem., for example) and most do not support such work at undergraduate institutions


• NSF funding for science education at 4yr institutions has been flat for past 10 years and curricular improvements funding has decreased by 50% over same timeframe


• Strong supporter of computational science education: the Keck Undergraduate Computational Science Education Consortium headed by Capital University.

• Keck support would also raise the visibility of the sciences regionally and nationally.

Wrap-up: Review, questions, tour next (Mike 5 min)