| When
nearly 5,000 freshmen arrived on campus in late September, they
had a lot to learn—fast. The shortest route to class. Library
protocol. Faculty expectations. But 360 classmates were already
up to speed, thanks to Discovery Seminars.
Introduced this year,
Discovery
Seminars are intensive month-long classes designed to meet the
needs of incoming freshmen. They are taught just prior to autumn
quarter by experienced faculty, with no more than 25 students in
each class. The 24 seminars offered this year covered everything
from the Puget Sound ecosystem to Aristotle’s Poetics.
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Students
in Roy Carpenter's Discovery Seminar about the Puget Sound
spent a day on an oceanography research vessel. Photo
by Karen Orders. |
“We call them
Discovery Seminars because their basic feature is to help students
understand the process of discovery—formulating questions,
deciding how to go about answering those questions—which is
a basic characteristic of an education at a research university,”
says Susan Jeffords, A&S divisional dean for the social sciences,
who spearheaded the effort. “Hopefully
by having that framework, the students will be able to optimize
their UW education.”
And understand what
it means to be in college. The sad truth is that many students arrive
thinking it will be like high school, only bigger.
“I remember a
new assistant professor once asking me, ‘When do we tell them
they’re not in high school anymore?’” says Jeffords.
“I didn’t have an answer. It sometimes takes students
a while to realize that expectations of a college education are
different. It’s not just a bigger, better high school. It’s
a different level of learning. With the Discovery Seminars, they
understand that right away.”
An Opportunity
for Depth
For many students, the
Discovery Seminar’s main appeal is the opportunity to settle
into campus life at a leisurely pace. “I wanted to familiarize
myself with my surroundings before the big rush of people came in,”
explains one freshman, speaking for many of her peers.
But what motivates faculty,
who spend many hours designing new courses for the program?
For astronomy lecturer
Toby Smith, who mostly teaches large survey classes, it was the
opportunity to teach a small class. He designed his seminar around
a topic of personal interest: the Apollo missions. “The format
of the seminar allowed me to go into the subject in greater detail
than I can in other classes,” he says.
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| During
Toby Smith's seminar on the Apollo moon missions, the class
spent a morning at the Museum of Flight in Seattle. Photo
by Toby Smith. |
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Communication Professor
Valerie Manusov also chose a topic—the symbolic potential
for nonverbal cues—that she covers only briefly in other classes.
“It was a topic I wanted to explore further,” she says,
“and I also liked the idea of teaching a real specialty class
to undergraduates, since many of the classes I teach are survey
classes.”
That is an important
aspect of the seminars, explains Paul LePore, director of undergraduate
program development for the College of Arts and Sciences and affiliate
assistant professor of sociology. “These courses are not looking
to cover broad sweeps,” says LePore, who coordinated the program
and taught a seminar himself. “The real strength of this university
is that in every corner, there are faculty and students asking the
greatest questions of the day. We wanted that to come across.”
David Allen, professor
of psychosocial and community health, had an additional motivation.
He wanted more contact with freshmen, since most of his courses
are at the graduate level. His goal for his seminar, “Race
and Identity at the UW,” was to have students view the diversity
on campus as a resource. “I teach this content to sophisticated
doctoral students,” he says, “and this group of freshmen
approached the material with an openness that was breath-taking.
It was a spectacular experience.”
Setting High
Standards
Before teaching his
seminar, Allen wasn’t sure what to expect of entering freshmen.
“I was worried that I wouldn’t pitch the course right,
finding that balance between challenging and overwhelming,”
he says. Fortunately, he was able to discuss his concerns with other
Discovery Seminar faculty in a one-day workshop, led by Valerie
Manusov and History Professor Robert Stacey, prior to teaching the
seminar.
“The faculty talked
a lot about expectations,” says Jeffords. “We decided
to set standards high, to show students how exciting and challenging
it can be to be at a research university. We also agreed to have
a writing experience in all classes, with Norman Wacker, lecturer
in the Interdisciplinary Writing Program, advising faculty on how
to structure writing assignments and provide effective feedback
on writing.”
Allen assigned a five-page
paper plus three shorter papers in his seminar each week. “For
two-thirds of the students, a five-page paper was the longest paper
they’d ever written,” he says. “I thought they’d
complain about the writing. None of them did. And with this small
class size, I was able to give them individual feedback on every
paper.”
Stacey took that a step
further. In his seminar, “Medieval People,” he required
students to take notes during one lecture, type them up, and hand
them in. “I wanted to see how they were taking notes,”
he said. “When you take notes, it changes the way you listen.
You have to think in an active way about where the speaker is in
the lecture, whether the point being made is part of the current
argument or the beginning of a new argument.” Stacey wrote
comments on the students’ notes but did not grade them. “It
was a way of saying, ‘This is a skill you need,’”
he says.
Stacey also planned
his seminar to include three types of history reading—textbooks,
scholarly articles, and primary source materials. “We read
each of these differently,” he explains. “I felt they
were all important, so I found a way to include all three types
of reading.”
In Manusov’s seminar,
reading assignments were often related to the following day’s
activities. The message was clear: skip the reading and you’ll
miss out. “If they didn’t do the reading, they could
see that they were at a distinct disadvantage,” she says.
“I hope they continue to appreciate how much more they learn
when they’ve done the reading ahead of time.”
An Experience
Worth Repeating
The long-term impact
of this guidance in reading, writing, and note-taking remains to
be seen. But some benefits of the seminars are evident immediately.
“Making the big
step from high school to college has been easier by starting without
the chaos of thousands of upper classmen surrounding me,”
says Glorya Cho, a freshman whose seminar was team-taught by two
faculty. “My professors usually teach graduate-level courses.
I found it both exciting and generous that they were willing to
share their guidance and expertise with freshmen.”
“The environment was nonthreatening and not overwhelming,
something I think is of infinite value to a freshman,” adds
Sarah Warburg.
Michael Spector describes
his professor as “great and enthusiastic” and his class
as “small and personal.” He says, “If I had to
do everything over, I would definitely sign up for the program again.”
He won’t have
the opportunity, since the program is for entering freshmen. But
faculty may repeat the experience.
“I’d do
it again in a heartbeat,” says Toby Smith. “It’s
a lot of work in a frantic month, but it’s worth it.”
Adds Manusov, “The
biggest thing was that it was really fun. There’s something
about teaching students who haven’t done this before. It’s
a different experience. You can’t take anything for granted.
It increased my enthusiasm for teaching generally.”
[Autumn 2003 - Table of Contents]
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