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Franklin
Pierce Curriculum Focuses Students 
on the Global Community
During a new war in the Middle East
and the threat of terrorism at home, many colleges and universities
are working to make their undergraduate offerings relevant.
Franklin Pierce College, a small, private, liberal arts institution
in New Hampshire has made global issues central to its curriculum.
Ten years ago, the faculty created an emphasis on global study
within its general education offerings. "One of the goals
is to extend the students' view of the world beyond ethnocentric
limitations," says Debra Picchi, who teaches anthropology
at the college and a senior seminar on global issues. Global
issues are addressed in three of the college's fifteen stated
learning goals for students. At all levels of study, students
take courses that deal explicitly with global issues, and
"[t]he most important way in which global education takes
place is through general education courses," says Picchi.
The Individual and Community
Core Curriculum
Organized as a sequential and interlocking
series of components, the general education curriculum encourages
students to reflect on their own culture and its role in the
greater global community. First-year students take the introductory
seminar, "Individual and Community"; all sophomore
year students take "The American Experience" and
the "Twentieth Century," courses that pair literature
and history.
"Science of Society,"
a two-part course for juniors "fosters students' ability
to think systemically about social institutions and culture
through the study of specific issues such as race and poverty
in the U.S." Building on this foundation, the second
part of the course is designed to expose students to comparative
political science, anthropology, and economics. Juniors also
take a self-assessment seminar and start a portfolio (to be
completed senior year) as a record of core course work. Students
must be able to demonstrate knowledge about other societies
and articulate their own role in the greater global community.
Students are encouraged to take
a variety of electives that include global themes-everything
from International Business Cultures (business and anthropology)
to Eastern Religious Thought (religion). Foreign language
study is not required in the general education curriculum,
but many of the major programs incorporate it or require students
to take at least a year of foreign language courses. Many
students find a second language essential to supplement other
global studies.
Senior
Capstone
Picchi notes that the global curriculum
has the same problem most general education curricula do-students
want to get the requirements out of the way. Students "sometimes
don't tie it all together, or don't experience their 'eureka'
moment until senior year," says Picchi.
And getting the big picture is exactly
what the senior capstone course, "Senior Liberal Arts
Seminar" is designed to do. Seniors have a choice of
enrolling in sections that concentrate on themes such as "love
and work" or "human ecology." In one senior
course, "Ecology and Culture," students must construct
an environmental resume. Unlike a regular job resume, the
syllabus states, students must chronicle their interaction
with the environment and their study of the subject over the
past four years. This course also serves as a tool for students'
self-assessment and continues the work of the reflective and
individualized portfolio work begun sophomore year. Students
must demonstrate in their portfolios mastery of the stated
student learning goals and the college's mission.
Weekly topics in the seminar include
study of other cultures, study of the Native American culture
and its context in the U.S., and "your future life style"-asking
students to consider what environmental choices they will
make and "the future of community life." The seminar
is also designed to be writing intensive and involve group
discussions, projects, and presentations.
Experiential Learning
A host of electives add experiential
elements to the curriculum, such as the Deliberative Dialogue
Forums. These forums teach students, faculty, and community
members to "frame" a contentious issue by capturing
four representative positions on the topic in question. Participants
then moderate forums in which the issue is discussed and the
representatives' positions are debated and discussed. In the
recent past, these dialogues dealt with campus or local issues.
However, a series of discussions about broadening the dialogues'
focus have emerged in response to September 11, and as a result
of planning for a new Global Citizenship initiative. New forums
encompassing international topics are planned for this spring
and will be held in conjunction with one of the general education
courses. The topics include What Kind of Relationship Do
We Want to Have with Russia? China-U.S. Relations: What Direction
Should We Pursue? Globalization: Fear or Promise?
These events are anchored by two
nonprofit organizations based on the campus, The New England
Center for Civic Life and The Diversity and Community Project.
The Center works with individuals and organizations to engage
citizens in the discussion of important public issues, and
The Diversity Project aims at creating books and briefs on
improving race and gender relations on campus.
Franklin Pierce also has many study
abroad options, such as a semester-long "walk" that
involves a staff member leading twenty students in a trek
across Europe. During "Experiencing the Arts in Germany,"
students travel to sample theatre, museums, dance, opera,
and other cultural sites to satisfy an art general education
requirement. Another program takes place in Costa Rica where
students take "Tropical Forest Ecology"-an extended
field trip to the country during the winter break to supplement
a course taken in the fall. The college enrolls international
students from 23 countries and these students plan activities
to teach others on campus about their cultures.
The Global Citizenship Initiative
The global curriculum continues
to evolve and the college continues to test its relevance.
After September 11th, the university community saw a need
for even more study of global and diversity issues. They formed
a learning community of faculty, staff, and students to infuse
selected majors and extra-curricular experiences with global
awareness and knowledge about democratic practices. They meet
on a monthly basis in seminars to discuss texts such as High
Noon: Twenty Global Problems, Twenty Years to Solve Them
by J.F. Richard, a selection of journal articles on post-colonial
literature and its critics, and other global citizenship literature.
A team from the global citizenship
initiative visited the
Greater Expectations leadership school, Worcester Polytechnic
Institution (WPI) this summer to initiate a mentoring program
with them based on the WPI
plan in which students learn how to manage and control
technologies in ways that benefit society. As part of this
program, WPI students participate in overseas projects (Costa
Rica, Copenhagen, Melbourne). The team brought back information
in hopes of setting up a similar program appropriate for Franklin
Pierce College to add an element that joins activism and technology
to its global curriculum.
For more information on AAC&U
projects and publications on global learning, visit www.aacu.org/issues/globallearning/.
For more information about
Franklin Pierce College's Individual and Community curriculum,
visit www.fpc.edu/pages/Academics/icic/index.htm.
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