Liberal Studies
Sonoma State University
|
Contact Information:
Francisco H. Vazquez, Provost
Hutchins School of Liberal Studies
Tel: (707) 664-3185
Fax: (707) 664-2505
Email: francisco.vazquez@sonoma.edu
Hutchins School of Liberal
Studies
THE PORTFOLIO
Liberal Studies 302/402
Introduction to the Hutchins School
The Hutchins School of Liberal Studies is a broad-based interdisciplinary
program which ranges widely across the many areas of enquiry that make up
the Liberal Studies. More than just a collection of courses, Hutchins'
program tries to provide the kind of educational experiences that will help
students become confident of their ability to participate effectively in
society. In this age of too-easy answers, well-educated citizens need to be
able to think independently, but the skill is rare. For that reason, the
program holds the fostering of intellectual development as one of its
highest claims. To think independently, one needs to be able to ask the kinds
of questions that are meaningful for the individual and effective in getting
to the heart of an issue. One needs, too, to be able to make coherent sense
of a wide and often confusing array of ideas and opinions. Finally, one needs
to be able to bring a sense of values to bear in interpreting what is "out
there." So that they may develop that independence of mind, students here
are given a good deal of latitude in determining the direction their
educations will take. Discovering how to use that latitude to shape a
meaningful education is part of the challenge of Hutchins.
The portfolio allows the student to record and evaluate the range of
educational experiences and ideas that constitute that individual's
particular pathway through the Liberal Studies. At the same time, the
portfolio is a means of assessment appropriate to the aims of the Hutchins
program. Unlike tests, which are the usual means of evaluating a student,
the completed portfolio furnishes a portrait of the independent learner and
captures a sense of the shaping process through which he or she developed
intellectually.
Hutchins Approaches to Learning
The Hutchins School of Liberal Studies provides many kinds of learning
experiences through which you can earn the 40 units needed for the major.
For example, you will be able to work independently or in small groups on
projects you design; you can enroll in an occasional lecture or lecture/
discussion course with large numbers of students; some of your work may
be creative in nature rather than limited to reading and writing; your study
plan may involve you in an internship or "study away." Certainly, as you
develop your major you will participate in several Hutchins seminars, for
the seminar is, after all, the heart and soul of our enterprise.
Most of your work in Hutchins will be done in regularly scheduled
Seminars, where discussions are led and assignments are made by a
seminar instructor. A few of your courses in the program may be in the
lecture format commonly employed by most disciplines. Still others, more
focused on activities, are designated as Workshops. You may also
earn units in Hutchins, however, through independent study projects, special
projects or internships. Those designations may need some further
explanation:
The Hutchins Major
Required Courses - First Semester
Libs 302. Introduction to Liberal Studies prepares students for
learning in the seminar format, for reading critically and for writing
effectively. Two major goals are 1) the application of multiple
perspectives to ideas, concepts and events; and 2) the development of each
student's ability to think independently.
Libs 304 A/B: These required key courses (304A - Fall, 304B -
Spring) are to be taken conjunction wish Libs 302. 304A consists of an
indepth exploration of the American experience, explored from a multi-
cultural perspective; 304B employs cross-cultural themes to foster an
international awareness.
Four Core Area Requirements
With regard to course content, you will find that most of your work
will fall into the four core areas which mark Hutchins' upper-division
program: Society and Self (Core Area I), The Individual and the Material
World (Core Area II), The Arts and Human Experience (Core Area III), and
Consciousness and Reality (Core Area IV). In order to complete the major,
all Hutchins students take at least one seminar or course from each Core
Area. Work in each of these Core Areas involves the student in a range of
perceptions and attitudes from many disciplines. Our course description
booklet each semester indicates which core areas each course fulfills.
Independent Study (Libs 310 or 410): This term indicates a kind of
study you may undertake by contracting with an individual instructor that
can be counted toward the major. It is up to you to propose the focus of
your project and arrive at an agreement with the instructor about number of
units, work to be completed, schedule of meetings during the semester, and
so forth. Such projects are intended to give you the opportunity to study
topics that are not already covered in Hutchins course offerings or which go
beyond the boundaries of any single discipline. Independent study projects
receive letter grades.
Special Projects (Libs 315 or 415): You may wish to do independent
work, but in an area which is not appropriately given a letter grade. For
example, certain kinds of work in the arts or other experiential learning
may not lend themselves to letter grading. In such cases, you should still
make your arrangements with an individual instructor and fill out a
contract. In these Special Projects, then, Credit/No Credit grading
is used instead of letter grades.
Internships and Study Away (Libs 397, Libs 398): A third important
option for you is the Internship. Pre-credential students are not
required to do Internship or Study Away. Internship allows
you to contract for volunteer work in business or in public or private
agencies. You receive academic credit for the research you do regarding
your internship and the reports and a final paper you write discussing what
you learn. You must have the Hutchins Internship Advisor's approval before
enrollment: Hutchins students are expected to involve themselves at least
once in an internship or to participate in Study Away. In Study
Away a student makes arrangements for course work outside Hutchins,
perhaps outside Sonoma State University, if that is appropriate. See your
advisor to discuss these latter two kinds of work, since arrangements have
to be agreed upon and put in writing before you undertake them.
Work done in any of the above forms is appropriate for inclusion in the
portfolio.
Portfolio/Senior Synthesis
The portfolio is a tool to enable you to plan and document your own
development of the major. The portfolio begins in Hutchins' gateway course,
Libs 302: Introduction to Liberal Studies; it evolves each term as you
complete your course work; it culminates in your final semester in a
capstone course, Libs 402: Senior Synthesis. Each portfolio is different.
Yours will reflect the pathway you followed in your interdisciplinary study.
We expect you to include in it examples of your achievements in each of the
four core areas, key courses, independent study and study away.
All essays returned to you from your work accepted for the major are to be
included in the portfolio. Brief reaction papers should not be included.
Other possible and equally valid kinds of items might be slides or pictures
of art work you produce, tapes of performances you give, ethnographies,
records of oral interviews and case studies. Reports on learning that you do
outside the regular classroom, through internships or at museums, concerts,
field trips, cultural ceremonies, for example, can be included. Activities or
experiences which are difficult to document in writing need to be discussed
with your advisor or instructor. Generally, whatever attests to your
growing understanding can be suitable. Your Senior Synthesis instructor
may agree that supportive upper-division work from courses outside of the
Hutchins major may be acceptable for inclusion in your portfolio.
The portfolio is not something to "get done" as soon as you start
work in Hutchins; it should "grow" as you do, semester by semester.
Because you will become surer of yourself as you build your major, the
earlier work you include in the portfolio may (but will not necessarily)
strike you as less representative as time goes on. It is nevertheless to be
valued as significant of who you were at a given point. In other words, don't
be discouraged if you find you have included items in a sense you have out
grown. They are certainly acceptable, even important, in a book like this.
They do not have to be updated or revised; if they met the requirements of
your instructors, they belong in the portfolio in the condition in which you
submitted them to the instructor. Your work in Libs 402 will be based on
the content of your portfolio. It is thus essential that you save all your
work.
While the Hutchins School places great emphasis on reading carefully and
writing effectively in a number of fields, it acknowledges the validity of
human expression in other forms that go beyond what can be achieved in
expository writing. So strongly are we persuaded that other kinds of
expression are important that we urge you to included them in your
educational experience and record them in your portfolio. While your
attempts may perhaps seem amateurish, they are no less important for that:
the "non-discursive" can let us "say the unsayable," and the attempt is worth
it.
In Libs 402 you will write an intellectual autobiography tracing the
development of your thinking in the major. The second feature of Libs 402,
the Senior Synthesis, explores an area or issue of special concern for you
which builds on aspects of works included in the portfolio and will
eventuate in a paper or project.
SENIOR SYNTHESIS
Libs 302
Checklist
1. Assess intellectual skills; see Libs 402: Self-Assessment.
2. Put all essays and other materials for the portfolio in chronological
order.
3. Write brief abstracts from essays.
4. Write intellectual biography.
5. Complete academic graduation forms (and waiver/concentration for those
on credential track).
6. Senior Synthesis project/paper
a. Develop topic
b. Complete research
c. Complete project/paper
d. Present project/paper
7. Receive portfolio assessment.
8. Complete portfolio self-assessment.
Libs 402 SELF-ASSESSMENT
Your portfolio demonstrates that in your written and other work in
Hutchins you have attained the following levels of competency in the areas
listed below:
|
LEVELS OF
COMPETENCY |
LEVEL 1 |
LEVEL 2 |
LEVEL 3 |
|
Interdisciplinarity |
Usually views issues through a single
discipline |
Sometimes uses more than one discipline to
work on an issue |
Often combines disciplines; thinks beyond
disciplinary boundaries. |
|
Depth of understanding/use of materials:
-level of diversity of sources
-interpretation of sources
|
Level too simple; too few
Inadequate and/or inaccurate |
Level adequate, number sufficient
Adequate and/or accurate |
Level sophisticated, number substantial
Insightful and/or precise |
|
Multiple perspectives in overall portfolio
work:
-pluralism, multiculturalism, etc. |
Consistently employs monocultural or
ethnocentric perspective |
Occasionally sees from "other"
point of view |
Consistently aware of other
perspectives |
|
Creativity and higher-level
synthesis |
"Plays it safe"; depends on
authorities ; keeps ideas separate from one another; wants
answers |
Sometimes tries "new"
approaches; somewhat independent in ideas; tolerates
ambiguity |
Finds imaginative ways; takes risks; pulls
ideas together; sees relationships; enjoys ambiguity |
|
Communication ability (written &
oral)
-clarity of expression
-cogency
-diversity of media
|
Confusing
Needs work
One type of presentation |
Straighforward
Satisfactory
More than one type of presentation |
Elegant
Good
Several types of presentation (3 or more) |
|
Seminaring skills |
Babbles or else fails to
participate |
Adequate |
"Barn builder"; sophisticated
insight into material and creative application of ideas |
Excerpt from:
Portfolios in the Major: A "Success" Story?"
Lu Mattson, Professor
Hutchins School of Liberal Studies
In the belief that a discussion of what has not worked may save others from
unnecessary difficulty, and is therefore more important than explaining
what has worked, we offer a number of our own criticisms of what we
designed. A critical reader has probably already guessed some of the
difficulties that our use of the portfolio, for all its possibilities, has
introduced. Some of them are relatively insignificant, but the most
important probably has to do with simplicity, or the lack thereof. We were
unaware how perplexing this portfolio could be for faculty and students
alike. Nor did we calculate how formidable portfolios can seem in courses
that use them extensively. Both problems--lack of simplicity and
formidability--show up in the introductory course. The portfolio does
indeed include important information about the interdisciplinary major,
about graduation requirements, precredential requirements. It does get the
student to respond to serious questions about goals and to analyze his or her
own level of achievement in previous courses. After working on the
portfolio, the students seem to understand where they are headed more
clearly than was previously the case. However, that first course has been
seriously affected by the needs of the portfolio itself. Asking the students
to read and write about each of the four Core Areas can consume too much of
a semester. Admittedly, the students do have a clearer grasp of what can be
included in each area, but that understanding is gained at a price. In fact,
the students need that course in order to learn to seminar and to write That
first aim is achieved under present circumstances, but the problem is that
course materials are now selected so that each Core Area is explored by a
few brief works or one longer one. The writing, too, is directed to each of
the Core Areas. The papers are adequate, but not better. The problem for us
is that we overdesigned the use of the portfolio in the introductory course,
thereby sacrificing course focus. Unlike our other courses that do take a
concentrated look al a single issue or idea, Libs 302 now takes four looks,
and the result is superficiality. The students do not learn in this course
how to dig deeply into a topic, and that affects the quality both of their
writing and of their verbal discourse.
The portfolio is not presently used during advising in the middle semesters
of the student's stay with us. In fact, the student's ongoing questions are
not about portfolio development at all, nor do the advisors pursue the issue.
In this instance, we have probably underdesigned rather than overdesigned
our protocol. If we do intend to switch to advising about the student's
intellectual growth, then we need to provide time in the semester's
schedule for it to occur, and we need to work together to explore what we
mean by the growth we are looking for in each student as represented
through the collection of products. The idea of ongoing advising based on
portfolio materials is not a bad one; it is simply an undeveloped one.
Our assumptions about the final course also needs reexamination. We
realize that we sent two messages to the students regarding the Senior
Synthesis paper, and each had a weakness inherent in it. One of our
instructions was for the student to return to the collected materials,
synopsize the work present for each Core Area, and write a major essay
"bridging" two or more of them. That is exactly the kind of thing that
sounds wonderful during planning stages. The reality of the situation is
that no one, neither faculty nor student, knows what a "bridging" essay is.
If we did know, we would probably recognize that writing one is far too
formidable a task for an undergraduate. Besides, who wants to put out a
major effort to revisit last semester's work?
The second message we sent the students was that they could write a
Senior Synthesis which looked at where they had been intellectually, where
the program had taken them, and where they expected to go in the future. It
is not hard to imagine which of the two essays the students choose to write.
It is also not difficult to imagine how self-serving and sycophantic those
essays can become. When pushed, many of the students will cop to it that
they select the latter option because it is easy, and because it is political
to praise us. That, needless to say, is not what we intended. We could,
however, have guessed what we would get. The first batch of portfolios
presented the latter type of essay exclusively, and it was nice to read
them. So did the second batch, but by then we began to understand what we
had invited. Obviously, another piece of work remains for us to get straight
among ourselves what we should be asking for. The exercise so far has been
illustrative.
Use of the portfolio for program evaluation, too, presents some problems. In
fact, sitting down with colleagues over several students' collected works is
quite an interesting exercise. At present, the procedure looks to be more
promising than we at first assumed it was. Our intention to use it to see
how a student had (or had not) developed under our tutelage led us to
instruct the students to include their papers in the condition in which they
received them from their instructors. We wanted to see what kind of
guidance the student was receiving. We had not calculated that the students
are reluctant to put anything less than their best foot forward. They want
to edit their work or to exclude any of it that got less than raves from the
instructor. And yet, sanitized papers will not tell us as much as we want to
know. The use of the portfolio, which goes down a different path than that
used by art majors who collect only their best work, needs to be made more
effective. We recognize that having the students place materials in four
categories with the Core Areas defeats our ability to see easily how a
student has developed through time, and so a proposal is before us simply to
have them arrange their work chronologically. In our attempt at elegance,
we missed the obvious.
So far, this report says little about the achievements of the portfolio. That
is probably as well, for we are truly in a middle state right now in which we
are beginning to understand what is, for us at any rate, a new medium. Even
if we did not recognize that the portfolio would seem formidable to some
students, we were right in believing that they, as well as we, would find
satisfaction in signs of their growth, and that should be mentioned. The
formidability is itself interesting in that we didn't anticipate it: We
assumed that the student would see the portfolio as an opportunity to
create something uniquely one's own, and, for most of them, that is proving
to be the case. But there is always the overlooked angle. The student who
doesn't see the portfolio as a creative challenge is likely to see it as a
frightening task. At the outset the book is, after all, empty except for
material we provide describing the program, and they are to fill it. It turns
out that we need to remember that not all juniors will be thrilled at the
prospect, even while we know that they will probably be proud of the
outcome.