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Growing
from Deep Roots
Kapi'olani Community College
Honors a Queen's Legacy in Developing Learning-Centered Education
The University of Hawai'i Kapi'olani Community College (KCC)
aspires to provide an educationboth in its environment
and its curriculumthat embodies the legacy of its namesake
Queen Julia Kapi'olani. The Queen, known for her concern for
the health, education, and perpetuation of her people is remembered
by more than just her name; her legacy often finds its way
into the practices and learning innovations of the college
to this day.
Queen Kapi'olani's Legacy in
the Curriculum
KCC was founded in 1946 as a technical
college, but today the school marries a liberal arts curriculum
with vocational/technical work. The school is part of the
University of Hawai'i (UH) system. Since the late 1980s, KCC
has refined a competency-based curriculum that emphasizes
learning outcomes and the abilities a student is to have mastered
by completion of his or her program. In concert with the rest
of the UH system, KCC has implemented five new general education
"skills standards," including critical thinking,
information retrieval and technology, oral communication,
quantitative reasoning, and written communication, but added
a sixth, unique to the college, "Understanding Self and
Community."
"As a community college, a
sense of place is important," says Robert Franco, KCC's
director of planning and institutional research. "We
don't have a sports team or many residence halls. We need
to create a sense of place and identity for our students."
As students learn, for example, about Hawai'i's history, they
struggle with historical inequities and moral issues such
as the overthrow of the Hawai'ian monarchy in 1893. Curriculum
planners hope students emerge with a sense of this history
and their place in it, and they believe that this firm sense
of identity will serve as an anchor to help the students succeed
in whatever they try to do.
Franco explains that visitors are
commonly greeted with a chant in Hawai'ian culture. "We
can't greet individual students with a chant when they first
arrive on campus, but our general education curriculum surrounds
them with the spirit of thatit is our welcoming chant."
The College also has successfully
implemented other learning-centered innovations for all students:
writing across the curriculum, writing-intensive courses,
information technology, Asia Pacific studies (comparative
studies of American, Pacific Islander, and Asian Studies),
and service learning.
Sustaining a Learning-Centered
Campus Culture: A Queen's Legacy
Last July a team of KCC faculty
and administrators attended the second Greater Expectations
Institute on Campus Leadership for Sustainable Innovation,
a gathering designed to build faculty and administrative capacity
to sustain learning-centered innovations. KCC has sent teams
to this institute during the past two years to develop aspects
of their strategic plan. KCC is also one of the schools selected
as part of the Greater Expectations Consortium on Quality
Education. "It's a venue for develop something we've
already been working on," says Franco. "In 2001,
we worked on developing our general education outcomes and
our first-year programs, and in 2002 we worked to weave the
[UH strategic plan, the] Malama Hawai'i initiative into that."
The plan that emerged from the 2002
meeting is called "Achieving Greater Expectations Ka
Hikina O Ka'i'ini," and launches the Malama Hawai'i initiative
to become a cross-curricular emphasis. The first goal of the
institute team was to "develop a student support program
for Native Hawaiians and other students, incorporating the
values of Queen Kapi'olani." It focuses on strengthening
support for remedial and developmental learning, and plans
to ensure that students graduate in a timely manner with needed
skills. The detailed plan includes three additional goals
that concentrate on the curriculum and students' sense of
place as well as nuts-and-bolts plans to ensure the implementation
of the strategic plan.
Building Faculty Commitment to
Campus Change
Franco finds the institute an effective
way to build teams of faculty and administrators to effect
change on campus, and he especially likes that the institutes
take place during the summer. He recognizes that teaching
loads make it more difficult for the faculty to concentrate
on effecting campus change, and the institutes give them a
head start: "We really try to get faculty involved and
at the same time recognize that their primary duty is to teach."
"We are committed to the importance
of the summer institutes," he says, "because we
use them to strengthen our emphases." He also notes that
the institution's commitment to send a team of faculty to
the institute was an obvious demonstration of the school's
faith and interest in faculty development: "That's a
big commitment from an island schoolto send them to
an institute as far away as Leesburg, Virginia. Faculty gets
this sense of commitment and knows that the college will act
upon what they bring back. Folks come back as a team and know
that the institution has empowered them to do something."
He believes this is essential to cultivate the next generation
of campus leaders.
After sustained, non-interrupted
immersion, the teams demonstrate a "synergy of thought,
action, and commitment." Not only do the faculty work
as a team at the institutes, but also they get a chance to
exchange ideas with other campuses. Franco believes the investment
is worth it: "At a community college we don't have financial
resources, [so] our capital comes in the form of social capital
and intellectual capital. That's what we use to make and sustain
change."
For more information on The University
of Hawai'i Kapi'olani Community College, visit www.kcc.hawaii.edu/.
To apply to have a team from your
campus attend the 2003 Greater Expectations Institute on Campus
Leadership for Student Engagement, Inclusion, and Achievement
(formerly the Institute on Campus Leadership for Sustainable
Innovation) in Denver, CO, bookmark www.aacu.org/meetings/gxinstitute.cfm.
To view KCC's campus statement for
the Consortium on Quality Education, visit www.aacu.org/gex/campusstatements/kapiolanistatement.cfm.
To view the Malama Hawa'ii Initiative,
visit www.kcc.hawaii.edu/~strategic/.
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