10 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, October 26, 2001 FRIDAY Focus 4 i The undergraduate experience goes under the i RECOMMENDATIONS BY THE PRESIDENT S COMMISSION ON THE UNDERGRADUATE EXPERIENCE Make the campus more interconnected, GOAL integrated and permeable GA "The geography of the campus should express, make available and encourage students to take advantage of the intellectual reach, social diversity and expansive activity that define the University at its best." I Connect students to the community and Treat the undergraduate career as a life- the worldGOA course journey, both intellectually and "Students come from the outside world, yet they socially overwhelmingly express the desire to reconnect teir education with it through community service and international travel and study." Build and adapt residence halls to function more like residential colleges Build and retrofit non-residential buildings for multipurpose, intergenerational, all-day use Improve both the physical and intellectual connections between North Campus and Central Campus Remove barriers to interdisciplinary and inter-college study and collaboration Create a Dewey Center for Undergraduate Life and Learning Expand student access to, and improve the quality of, study-abroad programs Expand the study of globalism and transnational phenomena Make transnational themes and the social integration of international students a principle of programming Establish a Community Education Council or Office Expand the capacity of the University's public-goods and cultural-resource units to offer programs for undergraduates "Curricula too often subordinate social and ethical goals to intellectual skill-building and knowledge acquisition, reinforcing the divide between "academics" and "student life." Create a Sophomore Year Initiative j with improved housing, advising,'and intellectual programs for second-year students Create a Sophomore Community Gateway program * Create "pathway" minors or certificates Convene a provost's task force to explore a more flexible calendar, including courses of variable length, summer or winter intersessions, and the use of Spring/ Summer Terms for alternative programs F A By Rachel Green Daily Staff Reporter Architecture Prof. David Scobey, a member of the President's Commission on the Undergraduate Experience, said he hopes to make University's campus more interconnected by opening the lines of communication between- stu- dents and faculty inside and outside the classroom. The Residential College is the best example of this type of interaction, Scobey said. The commission proposed that residence halls should adopt a simi- lar type of living and learning commu- nity. "It's important for students, especially incoming students, not to underestimate the connection between their living situ- ation and their education," Scobey said. Commission member Stephen Dar- wall said he wants to see faculty in the residence halls and in the cafeterias. "You don't hear stimulating conversa- tion now," Darwall said. "Instead people just eat and run. Students and faculty should be able to carry on intellectual conversations over lunch." Darwall, a philosophy professor, said the commission recommended that fac- ulty offices and special classes should be brought into the residence halls. The commission took into considera- .tion survey responses from students who chose not to attend the University to find ways to improve the undergradu- ate experience, Darwall said. Darwall also said the commission looked for ways to connect North and Central campuses and to ease the com- mute between the two. The commission focused on ways to make students more aware of opportuni- ties they have on campus that they might not know even exist, Scobey said. "We want students to take advantages of the opportunities that the complexi- ties of this institution provide," he said. Darwall said displaying student pro- jects on Central Campus from the schools on North Campus would be an example of promoting cultural aware- ness. "We're trying to create more cultural interest -in some of the public spaces on campus," he said. Darwall said the commission's pro- posal to build a Dewey Center for Undergraduate Life and Learning would mirror the Rackham building for gradu- ate students, providing "a space that is more about intellectual culture than the Union, for undergraduate students." The commission suggests naming the center after educator and philosopher John Dewey, who taught at the University in the 1880s. He said the building would have meeting and seminar rooms as well as spaces available for student groups to meet. By Elizabeth Kassab Daily Staff Reporter The world is getting smaller, and the University's role is to teach students how to interact with others in that world, according to the President's Commission on the Undergraduate Experience. "There is no way to be an educated American without understanding a lot more about the world than we thought we could get away with before," said philosophy Prof. Stephen Darwall, a commission member. The commission suggests the Uni- versity emphasize international educa- tion through study abroad programs and community service. It also states that American students and interna- tional students should be encouraged to interact with each other at the Uni- versity. Cirol Dickerman, director of the Office of International Programs, said the report is encouraging for study abroad programs at the University. "I'm delighted that the commis- sion's recommendation is to do more of it and to get more students to go abroad," Dickerman said. Dickerman said the University could implement "innovative types of programs that will mesh with under- graduate programs." "I would like to see study abroad students working closely with partner universities abroad," Dickerman said. "I've heard students say it's the best year they've had." Financial aid should be available for students who need it so the cost of the experience is not an issue, the report suggests. Dickerman estimated that 800 LSA students study abroad each year through programs at the University or another institution. "The committee report is fabulous," Dickerman said. "When deans them- selves support students going abroad - and actively support them - I think the numbers are going to rise." Supportive faculty also encourage students to take advantage of study abroad opportunities, Dickerman said. The University already has pro- grams that stress the importance of the interconnectedness of the world. One such program is the Global Change Project, an interdisciplinary initiative that strives to introduce students to various issues in the natural and social sciences. "None of these issues are discon- nected these days," said geology Prof. Ben Van der Pluijm. For example, earthquakes in one part of the world send financial ripples through coun- tries on the other side of the globe, he said. "We can no longer resolve prob- lems on a local level." By Maria Sprow Daily Staff Reporter In the past, the attention of universi- ties when creating a new curriculum has fallen upon two groups of people - the freshmen adjusting to life out- side high school, and the juniors and seniors getting ready to adjust to life outside college. "We often go to great lengths to orient first-year students to the Uni- versity - we provide housing, fresh- men seminars, research opportunities and the like," said Senior Vice Provost for Academic Affairs Lester Monts, a member of the President's Commission on the Undergraduate Experience. Sophomores have not received as much attention. According to the com- mission's report, sophomores will usu- ally experience a drop in grades and have a tendency for "social drifting." Commission members proposed several ideas to make up for the unin- tended negligence. "I think (sophomore year has) been neglected not only at Michigan but in general," said assistant Architecture. Prof. David Scobey. "I think it's because more university curricula are built around the two-stage model, where the first two years are built around a road curricula and then you should pic a specialty." Scobey said the commission focused on ideas that would help cre- ate a middle stage in which students are able to "to explore, maybe make some new choices that involve differ- ent things simply from deciding what you're going to major in." The ideas include a more intensive list of community outreach programs, multi-disciplinary sophomore semi- nars, artistic endeavors or other oppor- tunities that would be available for students in order to make their s*ho- more years more fulfilling. The commission hopes to imple- ment these ideas through the Sopho- more Year Initiative, which the report describes as "a set of intellectual, co- curricular, and support programs to enrich the middle phase of the under- graduate years." Part of the motivation for the plan was the Sophomore College at Stan- ford University. The college selects second-year students to return early from summer break and study in small groups with faculty in a residential set- ting. The initiative would operate under the expectation that sophomores would continue to live in the residence halls. Under the initiative, sopho- mores would also have the option of taking a week from their regular schedules to use for exploration See SOPHOMORES, Page 7 GOA Equip undergraduates with good maps and good guides for their journey "The University needs to do a better job of making its intellectual and social opportunities more transparent and navigable to undergraduates." GOAL Create a student community that is diverse, Renew the facul commitment to inclusive, adventurous, and self-reflective- G OA undergraduate eu ation and enhance student-faculty interaction. "The Commission believes that the University-faculty, staff, administrators, and students-need to deliberately craft a "The vision of undergraduate education described here ... c student community that reflects and reinforces the values only come to pass if the University similarly prepares and that it sees as fundamental to the undergraduate exoerience." dewar,4c the fault " .an UtUi ti VVV ! UV lUIIUUlIIVfltU1 iV illV Nf1U VlblUU WUiV V/ rl Vtl VIIV4" Improve the flow of information about University resources to undergraduates Overhaul the advising system Improve academic and social support programs aimed at increasing the retention of historically underrepresentedstudents End housing policies that enable incoming freshmen to select their residence hall and roommates Establish and enforce the expectation that undergraduates will spend two years in residence halls Postpone fraternity and sorority rush until at least the end of freshman year Sharpen the admissions process to find students eager to explore the diversity, scale, and breadth of the University. Improve recruitment and financial aid V ,AVr.Th. XAXA' 1 -- wa 1dUs ec LI d y. Increase faculty presence in undergraduate residential and social settings m Establish faculty programs to support innovative undergraduate teaching Enlarge instructional faculty and replenish college budgets for new commitments to undergraduate education Institutionalize more flexible career trajectories and faculty work expectations Align rewards and incentives to enhance faculty commitment and interaction outside the classroom 6 i By Elizabeth Kassab Daily StaffReporter In addition to campus maps that clearly illustrate the location of the Diag, students should be equipped throughout their undergraduate career with an equally clear map of what opportunities the University has to offer, the President's Commission on the Undergraduate Experience suggests. The commission's report found room for improvement in the University's aca- demic advising and recommends an overhaul of the system. "Despite recent, admirable efforts to professionalize and interlink the advis- ing staff, advising remains underre- sourced and fragmented at the University," the report states. Inadequate communication between academic advisers, peer advisers and resident concentration field "from faculty who often opt out of even the most rudimen- tary counseling role," the commission found. "The result - through no fault of the advising staff itself- exemplifies the inhospitality and routinization of public higher education at its worst." The committee calls for more inte- grated and cooperative advising from all sectors of the University. "The University has an amazing col- lection of intellectual and cultural resources," Darwall said. Students should be encouraged to take advantage of the wide curricplum, and museums and cultural events on campus. Darwall said he recently attended a concert at Hill Auditorium where there were few students in attendance. Darwall said part of the challenge is to make organizations such as the University Musical Society more Z.1 . 1.. .{... . «4. .--- . _A By Rachel Green Daily Staff Reporter Recommendations to restructure housing requirements and policies for undergraduate students are intended to promote better interaction among stu- dents following their freshman year in the residence halls. Architecture Prof. David Scobey, a member of the President's Commis- sion on the Undergraduate Experience, said the key to promoting diversity among student relationships is to alter the current status of on-campus hous- ing. The report suggests that the Univer- sity require freshmen and sophomores to live in residence halls. It also rec- ommends "in the strongest terms that the University end its policy of allow- ing incoming freshmen to select dorms residential life and everyday learning." The commission also recommends that fraternity and sorority rush be postponed until at least the end of the freshman year. While more stringent on-campus living requirements would conflict with living guidelines set forth by fra- ternities and sororities, Scobey said the commission worked with the Greek system while writing the report. "We are not against the Greek sys- tem," said mathematics Prof. Philip Hanlon, a commission member. "Hav- ing to make that decision so early in the year isn't good for the students and it isn't good for the Greek system." Scobey said he hopes postponing the move-in date for sorority and fra- ternity members would create diversity within the these houses and give peo- ple in the Greek system the opportuni- By Maria Sprow Daily Staff Reporter Members of the President's Com- mission on the Undergraduate Experi- ence fear the University's reputation as a research institution overshadows its educational goals. "I think a lot of what we did with this commission is try to debunk that idea that there is a conflict between undergraduate education and research," said committee member Paul Resnick, an associate professor in the School of Information. Committee members proposed rewarding professors with unusual and creative teaching methods, much like professors with research grants are rewarded. The committee also recom- mended students be rewarded for out- standing work. classes based out of the Dewey Center and the encouragement of experimental curricula, such as Prof. Ann Marie Sas- try's Engineering 100 class. The class introduces different aspects of engineer- ing - for instance the chemistry of baking and delivery problems - through pizza making. Resnick said the committee hoped to prove that the University, though large, could offer a better educational experi- ence than a small liberal arts college because of its size,not in spite of it. "Overall, we think Michigan can be better but only if we take advantage of the research and the breath of what is going on," Resnick said. "That's research, that's the arts, that's the pro- fessional schools, that's everything that is happening here. Resnick said the University would like to be known both as a research