Difference between revisions of "Keck-presentation"
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II) Why Earlham (Charlie 15 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) | 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) | ||
Line 54: | Line 96: | ||
• 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
- our cohesiveness and collective strength
- 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)