A. Define and assume responsibility for my own work.
As a member of this learning community I will know that I fool myself if I think I can avoid acting, avoid exercising power, avoid engaging in the world. Consequently, I will know how to work with other people to get things done in the world, to engage in applied, practical and consequential actions. To this end I will need to define and assume responsibility for my own work. |
Learning outcomes: | ? | Starting to do it |
Fully doing it |
Articulate and investigate my questions. | - | - | - |
Develop and continually assess an evolving academic plan based on development of my own questions and goals. | - | - | - |
Articulate and explain my choice of academic experiences and integrate educational experiences from year to year as related to the evolution of my own questions and goals. | - | - | - |
Articulate contexts of varying disciplines as related to my own questions. | - | - | - |
Articulate and understand work within varying contexts and across significant differences. | - | - | - |
Take responsibility for my own work in a collaborative context. | - | - | - |
Work in my chosen medium to thoughtfully and competently conveys my learning | - | - | - |
Engage with others in community-based project work | - | - | - |
Understand the ethical use of information. | - | - | - |
Identify the implications of my choice to act or not act in the world | - | - | - |
Articulate and demonstrate the necessity of working with others to exercise power and effect change. | - | - | - |
Possible ways to demonstrate these: | ? | Starting to do it |
Fully doing it |
Discussing my work in a self evaluation | - | - | - |
Starting discussions in Web Crossing and participating in other discussions | - | - | - |
Doing an individually directed research project | - | - | - |
Designing and implementing a collaborative project | - | - | - |
Articulating the significance of my work as a culmination of personal learning and in terms of its relevance to a democratic society (address depth and breadth of college experience). | - | - | - |
Producing a forum, exhibit, research paper, or artistic work that effectively communicates my learning. | - | - | - |
Maintaining a student portfolio | - | - | - |
Maintaining an academic plan | - | - | - |
Working with other students to design a Student Originated Study | - | - | - |
As a member of this learning community I will have the intellectual range and emotional generosity to recognize the parochialism of my own viewpoint. I will understand that I belong to a community whose prosperity and well-being are crucial to my own and that I help that community flourish by giving of myself to make the success of others possible. No one ever acts alone. I will open myself through the study of perspectives, world views, and experiences very different from my own. To that end, I will develop the skills to act effectively as a local citizen in a global context. |
Learning outcomes: | ? | Starting to do it |
Fully doing it |
Articulate the partiality of my own assumptions and experiences. | - | - | - |
Articulate the assumptions and experiences of people different from myself and know how to learn from culturally diverse perspectives. | - | - | - |
Compare historical and cultural perspectives with my own. | - | - | - |
Work in contexts where ambiguity and conflict are present, and work responsibly and efficiently on collaborative projects. | - | - | - |
Ask good questions, elicit the ideas of colleagues, and listen actively. | - | - | - |
Take responsibility for my own work in a collaborative context. | - | - | - |
Paraphrase and articulate the potential legitimacy of contradictory interpretations of actions/events. | - | - | - |
Represent experiences and issues I have studied using words, images, or other media to reflect the multi-faceted nature of collective experience | - | - | - |
Articulate the ways to implicate and partially define my engagement with others. | - | - | - |
Demonstrate the ability to engage, respect and negotiate competing claims from multiple communities and voices. | - | - | - |
Demonstrate the ability to work with others to analyze a problem or create a project, plan and implement a strategy, and evaluate the results. | - | - | - |
Demonstrate the ability to assume varying group process roles. | - | - | - |
Possible ways to demonstrate these: | ? | Starting to do it |
Fully doing it |
Producing seminar papers, portfolios, oral presentations, reflective writing, and research papers, documentary films, oral histories or works of art or fiction based on informed observation and research | - | - | - |
Creating and leading seminars | - | - | - |
Participating in seminar discussions. | - | - | - |
Assuming varied roles in group projects, seminars, and community discussions | - | - | - |
Facilitating small and large group work, group presentations, problem solving, mediation sessions, group planning activities. | - | - | - |
Communicating orally, in writing, in performance or art, to a small or large group, in formal and informal situations. | - | - | - |
Participating in internships and community service projects. | - | - | - |
Learning outcomes: | ? | Starting to do it |
Fully doing it |
Design and implement written and oral presentations appropriate to my audiences. | - | - | - |
Communicate effectively in a variety of forms to a variety of audiences. | - | - | - |
Ask good questions, elicit the ideas of colleagues, and listen actively, especially when I disagree with what I am hearing. | - | - | - |
Analyze oral presentations and arguments. | - | - | - |
Construct a theme, synthesize and build upon an argument. | - | - | - |
Interpret and create symbolic representations of both concrete facts and more abstract relations. | - | - | - |
Accurately paraphrase others’ assertions. | - | - | - |
Describe emotional tone of argument to identify what is unsaid, but relevant. | - | - | - |
Formulate nuanced questions and listen actively to responses. | - | - | - |
Create persuasive, logical arguments in written form. | - | - | - |
Create effective representations of emotional, aesthetic, and social realities through the use of written language. | - | - | - |
Create expressive representations of reality through the use of images, music, performance, and creative writing. | - | - | - |
Possible ways to demonstrate these: | ? | Starting to do it |
Fully doing it |
Creating written essays, research papers | - | - | - |
Starting discussions and participating in Web Crossing | - | - | - |
Making films, photographs, paintings, murals, sculpture or mixed-media artistic work | - | - | - |
Creating, producing or participating in an artistic performance using theatre, dance or music | - | - | - |
Writing screenplays, poetry, journalism and creative nonfiction | - | - | - |
Presenting in a public forum | - | - | - |
Documenting oral histories | - | - | - |
Completing and publishing ethnographic descriptions of situations, events, or communities | - | - | - |
Demonstrating information literacy | - | - | - |
Participating in seminar conversations | - | - | - |
As a member of this learning community I will know how to read, understand, and be curious about a range of radically different discourses. I will learn to understand and critically evaluate a range of verbal and nonverbal discourses, including social analysis, science and natural history, popular culture, mathematics, fiction, and art. I will learn to encounter the world as a fascinating and extraordinarily intricate set of texts waiting to be read and understood. I will have the ability to appreciate a closely reasoned rigorous argument, while understanding that such arguments always serve distinct values. Assessing both the rigor and the values implicit in arguments is a fundamental skill. I will have the ability to appreciate complex creative works of art. To that end I will develop skills in critical thinking. |
Learning outcomes: | ? | Starting to do it |
Fully doing it |
Identify an author’s point of view and thesis, and the cultural context in which the work was created. | - | - | - |
Analyze and evaluate arguments and the adequacy of evidence and supportive arguments. | - | - | - |
Analyze oral presentations and arguments. | - | - | - |
Create written work or works of art. | - | - | - |
Interpret written works and works in performance, visual, and media arts. | - | - | - |
Make careful observations of the natural world and interpret them. | - | - | - |
Take more than one position on a particular issue and defend each position reasonably and respectfully. | - | - | - |
Suspend disbelief enough to grasp another person’s points of view by careful, active reading. | - | - | - |
Construct a theme, synthesize and build upon an argument. | - | - | - |
Demonstrate the ability to assume varying group process roles. | - | - | - |
Interpret and create symbolic representations of both concrete facts and more abstract relations. | - | - | - |
Efficiently make estimates and critically evaluate their limits of validity. | - | - | - |
Recognize the potential legitimacy of contradictory interpretations of actions and events. | - | - | - |
Possible ways to demonstrate these: | ? | Starting to do it |
Fully doing it |
Discussing and write about nonfiction, fiction, poetry, essays, scientific research articles, art and performance. | - | - | - |
Discussing ideas and posting your ideas in Web Crossing | - | - | - |
Participating in Quantitative Reasoning discussions in our Web Crossing site | - | - | - |
Parsing and summarizing written works, arguments, mathematical proofs; read graphs and charts and interpret their significance. | - | - | - |
Writing papers, poetry, responses, etc. | - | - | - |
As a member of this learning community I can apply the skills of artist, scientist, manager, analyst, critic or engineer: the ability to look at a complicated reality, break it into pieces, figure out how it works, in order to do practical things in the world. I can apply appropriate qualitative, quantitative, and creative ways of thinking to the practical and theoretical questions that confront me in the world. To that end I will learn that as a part of taking the world apart (analysis) I will need to learn the equally complex task of putting it together (synthesis). |
Learning outcomes: | ? | Starting to do it |
Fully doing it |
Formulate good questions based on need for information; identify potential sources of information; and develop and apply successful search strategies to access varied sources of information, including computer-based technologies. | - | - | - |
Select appropriate resources to investigate those questions and evaluate the quality and accuracy of information and resources | - | - | - |
Articulate relevant theoretical material, historically and conceptually. | - | - | - |
Efficiently make estimates and critically evaluate their limits of validity. | - | - | - |
Read, analyze, interpret, use, and create information. | - | - | - |
Interpret and create symbolic representations of both concrete facts and more abstract relations. | - | - | - |
Integrate information into existing knowledge, use it in problem solving, and cite and document it accurately. | - | - | - |
Apply information to practical and theoretical problems. | - | - | - |
Synthesize diverse approaches and information to generate new perspectives and inquiries. | - | - | - |
Understand the ethical use of information. | - | - | - |
Articulate contexts of varying disciplines they relate to my own questions. | - | - | - |
Efficiently make estimates and critically evaluate their limits of validity | - | - | - |
Interpret and create symbolic representations of both concrete facts and more abstract relationships | - | - | - |
Possible ways to demonstrate these: | ? | Starting to do it |
Fully doing it |
Completing student research projects that incorporate collection and analysis of data. | - | - | - |
Using statistics, spreadsheets and charts. | - | - | - |
Reporting about your project in class or in Web Crossing | - | - | - |
Generating theoretical models, compare predictions with observations. | - | - | - |
Participating in community service, internships, governance. | - | - | - |
Understanding issues of academic freedom, copyright, and plagiarism. | - | - | - |
Create written work or works of art. | - | - | - |
I will be able to articulate the connections I have made so as to be able to make sense of the world and act in creative, reflective, and responsible ways within it in ways that make sense to a variety of other people. To that end, I will develop reflective practices as a integral part of my learning. |
Learning outcomes | ? | Starting to do it |
Fully doing it |
Demonstrate intellectual depth by participating in an advanced project. | - | - | - |
Appreciate and apply creativity, imagination, and analytic and synthetic reasoning, as appropriate. | - | - | - |
Demonstrate intellectual breadth by studying, in some depth, in more than one area of the curriculum. | - | - | - |
Write an essay on the personal and social significance of your learning. | - | - | - |
Articulate and understand work within varying contexts and across significant differences. | - | - | - |
Synthesize diverse approaches and information to generate new perspectives and inquiries. | - | - | - |
Understand the ethical use of information. | - | - | - |
Possible ways to demonstrate these: | ? | Starting to do it |
Fully doing it |
Producing student originated software | - | - | - |
Completing and displaying or performing a significant piece or body of artistic work. | - | - | - |
Doing advanced work within a coordinated studies program (such as by completing a research paper or lecture at an advanced level). | - | - | - |
Participating in a collaborative, community-based work and sharing your learning and achievements through writing, visual work, or performance. | - | - | - |
Completing a senior thesis project—group or individual project. | - | - | - |
Articulating the significance of my work as a culmination of personal learning and in terms of its relevance to a democratic society (address depth and breadth of college experience) | - | - | - |
To that end, the Evergreen education, and the Reconciliation program is oriented around the Five Foci
Foci\Bloom's Taxonomy | Knowledge | Comprehension | Application | Analysis | Synthesis | Evaluation |
Interdisplinary learning | - | - | - | - | - | - |
Collaboration | - | - | - | - | - | - |
Personal engagement | - | - | - | - | - | - |
Linking theory and practice | - | - | - | - | - | - |
Learning accross significant differences | - | - | - | - | - | - |
Curriculum\Bloom's Taxonomy | Knowledge | Comprehension | Application | Analysis | Synthesis | Evaluation |
Define and assume responsibility for our own work | - | - | - | - | - | - |
Participate collaboratively and responsibly in a diverse society | - | - | - | - | - | - |
Communicate creatively and effectively | - | - | - | - | - | - |
Demonstrate independent, critical thinking | - | - | - | - | - | - |
Apply qualitative and quantitative modes of inquiry appropriately to practical and theoretical problems across disciplines, including the Arts and Sciences. | - | - | - | - | - | - |
Demonstrate depth, breadth, and synthesis of learning and the ability to reflect on the personal and social significance of that learning | - | - | - | - | - | - |