Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byRandell Dale Blair Modified over 9 years ago
1
11 LESSONS LEARNED: SHAPING STRUCTURES FOR SCIENCE The Project Kaleidoscope Experience 1992 – 2009 Jeanne L. Narum, PKAL Director Maryland Community College Facilities Planners Council Meeting Howard Community College June 1, 2009
6
Percent of Classroom in Use Boston University Utilization Measures
7
Classrooms Course Sections 50% Room Utilization 75% Room Utilization Increased number of course sections impacts student : faculty ratio, section size, or number of faculty 67% Room Utilization Removing a classroom from the inventory potentially allows it to be reused for another function 40% Room Utilization Utilization Measures
8
Libraries Emory University Cox Hall
9
Informal Spaces
10
Three PKAL/NSSE performance tests Learning takes place in a community where faculty see students as partners in learning Learning is personally meaningful and steeped in investigation from the first first course through capstone courses. Learning takes place in a community where students collaborate with one another.
11
Three PKAL/NSSE performance tests Learning takes place in a community where faculty see students as partners in learning Learning is personally meaningful and steeped in investigation from the first first course through capstone courses. Learning takes place in a community where students collaborate with one another.
12
PKAL 1: Learning takes place in a community where faculty see students as partners in learning Mount Mercy College
13
Typical classroom design affirms the authority of faculty over knowledge
14
2004 NSSE Report on the frequency of faculty-student interaction outside of class
15
Where on your campus do faculty and students associate outside of the classroom? Might the provision of good learning spaces encourage such encounters?
16
PKAL 2: Learning is personally meaningful and steeped in investigation from the very first courses through capstone courses
17
2004 NSSE Report on behaviors that enrich education experiences
18
PKAL 3: Learning takes place in a community where students collaborate with one another
19
2004 NSSE Report on the frequency of collaborative work outside of class
20
Where on your campus do students work collaboratively? Might the provision of good learning spaces make a difference to this learning behavior? Computing Center at Cox Hall Emory University
21
CENTRAL PKAL QUESTION: “ In what ways might the structure we are planning become a physical expression of our vision for the future of our institution? ” Loras College
22
Messy, chaotic, on a journey, like a cafeteria, like a dressing room trying on ideas, noisy, no center of attention, playing with tools of the STEM practitioner, peer to peer learning, engaged… 22
23
Opportunities to collaborate, connect, communicate, use the tools of the trade, come to own their own learning… 23
24
24 Engaged learners How do people learn best? Not, in most cases, through lecturing, though far too many instructors continue this centuries’ old practice, and spaces accommodate such practices. Effective learners are active & engaged with their learning.
25
25
26
26 Audit: Why Change? Because I listen carefully to my students… Because I continue to ask myself what is working right and what does not seem to be working right Because I remember what worked for me when I was a student their age.
27
27 THEN Uni-disciplinary Single purpose spaces Teacher-directed Passive learning Independent learning Limited technologies Focus on STEM majors Unconnected NOW Multidisciplinary Multi-use / user spaces Learner-centered Engaged learning Collaborative learning Ubiquitous technologies Focus on all students Connected 21 st Century Boundary-Crossing Agents
28
28 PKAL’S Vision …have access to robust learning experiences that motivate them to persist and succeed in the study of STEM fields so they are motivated to enter into careers in STEM fields, prepared for contemporary careers that require depth of understanding/literacy in regard to scientific, quantitative, and technological worlds, and equipped with the breadth of skills and capacities that empower them to be contributing members to our nation’s 21 st century economy and democracy.
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.