Vitality in Undergraduate Research Programs

21
Vitality in Undergraduate Research Programs Claire Peinado Fraczek, PhD University of Washington Bothell March 7, 2014

description

Vitality in Undergraduate Research Programs. Claire Peinado Fraczek, PhD University of Washington Bothell March 7, 2014. When visiting other institutions, how do I measure the vitality of their undergraduate research programs?. Deep Time: Nurturing the Work Across Generations. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Vitality in Undergraduate Research Programs

Page 1: Vitality in Undergraduate Research Programs

Vitality in Undergraduate Research Programs

Claire Peinado Fraczek, PhDUniversity of Washington Bothell

March 7, 2014

Page 2: Vitality in Undergraduate Research Programs

When visiting other institutions, how do I measure the vitality of their

undergraduate research programs?

Page 3: Vitality in Undergraduate Research Programs

Deep Time: Nurturing the Work Across Generations

Page 4: Vitality in Undergraduate Research Programs

Research in service to . . . what?

An invitation to learning

Page 5: Vitality in Undergraduate Research Programs

Two Research Models

Traditional Transformative

Page 6: Vitality in Undergraduate Research Programs

Traditional Research Model Key Features

• Technical Skills• Advising• Methodological support• Summer intensives• Public presentations

Page 7: Vitality in Undergraduate Research Programs

Measuring Student Engagement

Rates and quality of participation:

• Conference participation• Disciplinary diversity• Fellowship recipients• Utilization of academic supports• Transfer engagement• Research methods course enrollment• Collaborative opportunities

Page 8: Vitality in Undergraduate Research Programs

Measuring Faculty Engagement

• Gallery and journal presence• Visible incentives and rewards• Disciplinary diversity

Page 9: Vitality in Undergraduate Research Programs

Building an Inquiry Culture

The challenges of individualism

Page 10: Vitality in Undergraduate Research Programs

High Impact Practices (AAC&U, LEAP)

Student Engagement

(Learning)

Undergraduate Research

First Year Seminars & Experiences

Common Intellectual Experiences

Learning Communities

Writing-Intensive Courses

Collaborative Assignments & Projects

Diversity/Global Learning

Service-Learning, CBL

Internships

Capstone Courses & Projects

Page 11: Vitality in Undergraduate Research Programs

Why invest in a transformative model?

Help students develop stories and translations about their research and engagement to

broader communities.

Page 12: Vitality in Undergraduate Research Programs

Transformative Research Model

3 Key Pillars

1. Make it social2. Integrate curriculum across 4 years3. Align research with broader community

engagement efforts

Page 13: Vitality in Undergraduate Research Programs

Zemis

Page 14: Vitality in Undergraduate Research Programs

Intellectual Friendships

Page 15: Vitality in Undergraduate Research Programs

Waseda University

Tokyo, Japan

Page 16: Vitality in Undergraduate Research Programs

Hirota Zemi Graduation

Page 17: Vitality in Undergraduate Research Programs

Zemi Implications for Student Learning

• Academic risk-taking• Strong mechanisms of accountability• Multi-generational team• Collaborative problem-solving• Leadership

Page 18: Vitality in Undergraduate Research Programs

Pillar 2: Curricular Integration

Re-orient students to their own learning

• Orientation: inquiry through learning plans• E-portfolios• CUSP to Schools coherence

Page 19: Vitality in Undergraduate Research Programs

Pillar 3: Community Based Learning & Engagement

• CUSP to Capstone alignment through research• Research tracks through existing programs

(MATCH)

RESEARCH +

Page 20: Vitality in Undergraduate Research Programs

Vitality

. . . as learning through research and inquiry

1. Exuberant physical strength or mental vigor2. Capacity for survival or for the continuation

of a purposeful or meaningful existence, and3. Power to live or grow