FSD 16-05 General Education Learning Outcomes for PNW

November 13, 2016

 

PURDUE UNIVERSITY NORTHWEST FACULTY SENATE

Faculty Senate Document 16-05

Submission Date: 11/13/2016 (General Education Committee)

Senate Action and Date:

  • For Discussion, 12/9/2016;
  • For Action, 1/13/2017;
  • Approved: 1/13/2017;

PDF version of this document available

Resolution on General Education Learning Outcomes for Purdue University Northwest, November 11, 2016

The General Education Committee of the Purdue University Northwest Faculty Senate proposes
the following resolution.

Expressing a commitment to the highest standards of baccalaureate education for all PNW
students, the Purdue University Northwest Faculty adopt the LEAP Essential Learning Outcomes
as General Education Learning Outcomes for Purdue University Northwest.

The adoption of these outcomes represents an important step in developing a General
Education Policy for Purdue Northwest. The General Education Committee plans to follow
this with a proposal for a comprehensive General Education Assessment Plan in early 2017.
This plan will provide procedures for adding and removing courses from the approved lists,
and detail assessment expectations for general education courses, and general education in
PNW’s academic programs.

Map of Indiana State Transfer General Education Outcomes to LEAP Essential Learning Outcomes
INDIANA STATE TRANSFER GE (YEAR 1)LEAP ESSENTIAL LEARNING (4-YEAR)
FOUNDATIONAL INTELLECTUAL SKILLSWritten CommunicationINTELLECTUAL AND PRACTICAL SKILLS IWritten and Oral Communication
Speaking and ListeningInformation Literacy
Quantitative ReasoningQuantitative Literacy
WAYS OF KNOWINGScientificKNOWLEDGE OF HUMAN CULTURES AND THE PHYSICAL AND NATURAL WORLD
Humanistic and Artistic
Social and Behavioral
INTELLECTUAL AND PRACTICAL SKILLS IIInquiry and Analysis
Critical and Creative Thinking
Teamwork and Problem Solving
PERSONAL AND SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITYCivic Knowledge and Engagement— local and global
Intercultural Knowledge and Competence
Ethical Reasoning and Action
Foundations and Skills for Lifelong Learning
INTEGRATIVE AND APPLIED LEARNINGSynthesis and advanced accomplishment across general and specialized studies

The Essential Learning Outcomes

Beginning in school, and continuing at successively higher levels across their college studies,
students should prepare for twenty-first-century challenges by gaining:

Knowledge of Human Cultures and the Physical and Natural World

  • Through study in the sciences and mathematics, social sciences, humanities, histories,
    languages, and the arts

Focused by engagement with big questions, both contemporary and enduring

Intellectual and Practical Skills, including

  • Inquiry and analysis
  • Critical and creative thinking
  • Written and oral communication
  • Quantitative literacy
  • Information literacy
  • Teamwork and problem solving

Practiced extensively, across the curriculum, in the context of progressively more challenging
problems, projects, and standards for performance

Personal and Social Responsibility, including

  • Civic knowledge and engagement—local and global
  • Intercultural knowledge and competence
  • Ethical reasoning and action
  • Foundations and skills for lifelong learning

Anchored through active involvement with diverse communities and real-world challenges

Integrative and Applied Learning, including

  • Synthesis and advanced accomplishment across general and specialized studies

Demonstrated through the application of knowledge, skills, and responsibilities to new settings and complex problems

Note: This listing was developed through a multiyear dialogue with hundreds of colleges and universities about needed goals for student learning; analysis of a long series of recommendations and reports from the business community; and analysis of the accreditation requirements for engineering, business, nursing, and teacher education. The findings are documented in previous publications of the Association of American Colleges and Universities: Greater Expectations: A New Vision for Learning as a Nation Goes to College (2002), >Taking Responsibility for the Quality of the Baccalaureate Degree (2004), and College Learning for the New Global Century (2007).
For further information, see the LEAP website.

Background

The Essential Learning Outcomes (ELOs) were first presented in 2008 in College Learning for
the New Global Century, a publication of the Association of American Colleges and Universities
(AAC&U). The ELOs are part of AAC&U’s Liberal Education and America’s Promise (LEAP)
initiative. Working with a wide variety of higher education institutions, the ELOs attempted to
establish common ground for American higher education in response to a wide variety of
institutional visions, and the changing needs of employers. It was followed by the creation of
detailed rubrics for each outcome, as well as state and national efforts to join the outcomes to
useful and high-quality assessment. Many colleges and universities have adopted the ELOs,
along with a number of states, including Indiana. Purdue University North Central adopted the
ELOs in December, 2010. In recent years, several faculty from both campuses have participated
in the Multi-State Collaborative, receiving training in conducting assessment using the ELOs and
their associated rubrics.

General Education unification efforts during academic years 2014-15 and 2015-16 resulted in the
following being approved by both Faculty Senates of PNC and PUC:

Purdue Northwest Core Curriculum
CORE CATEGORIESCREDITSCOURSES
English Composition6Select from the English Composition Core list
Speech Communication3Select from the Speech Communication Core list
Quantitative Reasoning3Select from the Quantitative Reasoning Core list
Natural Sciences3Select from the Natural Sciences Core list
Technology3Select from the Technology Core list
Humanities3Select from the Humanities Core list
Social Sciences3Select from the Social Sciences Core list
Additional credits3Select a course from any Core list except FYE
First-Year Experience (FYE)1–3For courses with less than 3 credits, 1 or 2 credits must be earned from another Core list
Total (minimum)30

The Core Categories reflect the merger of previously existing General Education course
categories in the two universities:

Core Categories
PNC CORE CATEGORYPUC GE COMPETENCYPNW GE CATEGORY
N/AGEWR Written CommunicationEnglish Composition
N/AGESL Speaking and ListeningSpeech Communication
Quantitative ReasoningGEQR Quantitative ReasoningQuantitative Reasoning
Natural SciencesGESE Scientific Ways of KnowingNatural Sciences
TechnologyGETS Technology in SocietyTechnology
HumanitiesGEHA Humanistic and Artistic Ways of KnowingHumanities
Social SciencesGESB Social and Behavioral Ways of KnowingSocial Sciences
First-Year ExperienceGEUR University and Personal ResourcesFirst-Year Experience (FYE)

Currently, the lists of approved courses in these categories reflect the combined lists as of the last
academic year.

Approved November 11, 2016

General Education Committee

  • Arifin Angriawan
  • Michelle Block
  • Paul Hecht (Chair)
  • Liberty Pelter
  • Richard Rupp (Vice Chair)
  • Kim Scipes

Not present

  • Jessica Thomas (Assessment Steering Committee Liaison)