Notes
Slide Show
Outline
1
Your English Department Agreed to do WHAT?
  • Dr. Thomas Polito
  • Department of Agronomy
  •  Department of Ag Education & Studies
  • Dr. Dave Roberts
  • Department of English


  • Iowa State University


2
Your English Department Agreed to do WHAT?
  • Our work is part of ISU's Learning Community initiative
  • The Continuum of Communication   Intensity
  • Our Journey
  • Barriers


3
Learning Communities
  • Community builds peer support and forges bonds between students and teachers.
  • Community makes learning more engaging and meaningful by enabling students to connect ideas from courses across the disciplines.


4
Degrees of communication intensity
  • "Let the English Dept. do it!"
  • Acknowledging responsibility
    • But what to do about it?
  • Communication intensive courses
    • Essay tests
    • Communication projects

5
Degrees of communication intensity
  • Clustered courses
    • Aside on Learning Communities
    • Student cohorts without faculty collaboration
  • Linked courses
    • Cohorts with faculty collaboration
      • Related readings
      • Related assignments



6
Degrees of communication intensity
  • Integrated courses
    • Exclusive cohort with maximum faculty collaboration
      • Coordination at the syllabus level
      • Joint assignments
      • Joint evaluation of those assignments


7
Syllabus coordination exercise
  • Where can you develop links with this course's syllabus?


8
The Journey Begins
  • Early 1990s—College of Agriculture
    • Fundamental and comprehensive curriculum review
  • Stakeholder feedback
    • Graduates technically competent but poor communicators
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The Journey Begins
  • Based on the review, the Ag College established the following communication outcomes:
    • Be able to speak and write clearly and persuasively.




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The Journey Begins
  • Be able to prepare effective visual presentations.
  • Be able to work effectively with others on complex, issue-laden problems requiring holistic problem-solving approaches (and communicate the solution to an audience).


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The Journey Begins
    • The "new era"
      • Recognizing responsibility
      • Developing a curricular response by:
        • Implementing communication intensive courses
        • Seeking help from English and establishing AgComm
12
The Journey continues
  • Tom's course, Agronomy 356, carries communications intensive credit
    • Utilized AgComm consultants from Rhetoric & Professional Communication program
13
The Journey continues
  • Agronomy 356: Soil, Water and Fertilizer Management
    • Enrolls juniors & seniors from various curricula in Agriculture
    • Requires students to complete weekly quizzes, each consisting of four essay questions
    • Includes collaborative writing, required revisions, and an oral presentation
14
The Journey continues
  • Problem encountered in 356
    • Students understood the agronomic principles in isolation
    • Expectations were not met in:
      • Their problem solving abilities
      • Their abilities to effectively communicate the solutions to those problems
15
The Journey continues
  • Our Solution:
    • Integrate Agron 356 with English 309 through common:
      • Students (exclusive cohort)
      • Course objectives
      • Course project
      • Classroom space

16
The Journey continues
  • English 309: Report and Proposal Writing
    • Enrolls juniors & seniors from every college at ISU
    • Requires 6-8 projects, about 8000-10,000 words total
    • Requires collaborative writing, revision, and oral presentations

17
The Journey continues
  • The Integration Process
    • Building the team
    • Coordinating the syllabi
    • Handling the unexpected
    • Continuing instructor interaction



18

Building the Team
  • We were lucky to have the AgComm network
  • It takes a common vision . . .
    • Similarities of commitment among the three instructors to focus on students
    • Opportunity to blend teaching, research and assessment
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Coordinating the syllabi
  • Assignments are aligned with the consulting process
    • Prospective client report
    • Consulting proposal
    • Progress reports
    • Formal oral presentation
    • Final recommendation (farm plan) report
    • Oral presentation to client

20
Syllabus coordination exercise
  • Discuss your results
    • Common ground?
    • Hook-up points?
  • Here's how we did it …
21
Handling the unexpected
  • Tom saves the day
  • Which class is this?
22
Continuing instructor interaction
  • Weekly meetings
    • Fine tune the coordination
    • Trouble shoot
  • Daily collaborations
    • Attend and actively participate in each other's classes
    • Cross-reference each others' material
23
Continuing instructor interaction
  • Joint evaluation
    • PC report
    • Progress report
    • Farm plan
24
Evaluation exercise
  • Provide students with feedback on the handout
25
Examples of joint evaluation
  • Samples from 356/309
26
Barriers?
  • Getting Started
  • Finding collaborators
  • Course scheduling
  • Others?


27
Barriers?
  • Getting started
    • Find out what types of communications your graduates do and work some into your course
    • Focus on problem solving
      • Tom found the communications strategies that Dave teaches are also problem solving strategies.
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Barriers?
    • Require students to communicate solutions to an audience (client, boss)
      • Working with subject matter knowledge
      • Practicing problem-solving strategies
      • Communicating

29
Barriers?
  • Finding collaborators
    • Not all English departments are the same
    • Network
      • Where do teachers congregate
      • Colleagues of friends
30
Barriers?
  • Course scheduling




31
Barriers?
  • What barriers might you find?


  • Brainstorm solutions