The Cs of College – What I Want My Students to Learn (repost)

In honor of back-to-school and, for some, the first back-to-in-person-teaching in 20 months, here is a repost of a 2018 entry…

Content. This is the C that drives our education system. The content is the material that we want students to learn in our classrooms. Recently, I went to a college teaching conference and, along with the end of semester experiences, facilitated a reflection on what I want my students to take away from my classes. While I agree that the content is a critical component, I also acknowledge that if we teach students how to learn, they can look up content in the moment. Plus, necessary content is often specific to the situation and the environment, which may not be the same content that I offer in my curriculum. Therefore, I propose several additional important Cs…

Communication

Being able to communicate effectively via multiple mediums is a life skill that requires practice. Especially in a generation rife with electronic communication, providing students with opportunities to practice listening and to dialogue with peers, write professionally, and present orally sets them up for future success.

Collaboration

Ah, working with others! Being able to communicate is a sub-set of collaboration, but working in a group presents unique challenges, especially when you’re paired with someone who wants to do nothing…or everything. Navigating group-work situations while in schools enables students to gain perspective and experience that will inform the group-work that will inevitably present itself in professional life.

Conscientiousness

Being conscientious is often an intrinsic characteristic, but one that can be modeled and encouraged. As with communication, providing students with opportunities to practice may enable them to increase their awareness of how to be conscientious. This includes skills such as respect, time management, organization, consistency, punctuality, professionalism, and effective communication.

Compassion

Compassion is also an intrinsic characteristic that can be promoted. Sharing stories and information to broaden students’ perspectives may increase their ability to understand and respect differences. Compassion can also be modeled, both in teacher-student interactions, and by creating a safe and effective classroom climate that generates respectful dialogue. Compassion for self is also critical, and students should be encouraged to reinvent negative self-talk (ex: change “I’m not a good writer” to “I’m still working to improve my writing”). Interesting find: Wharton Commencement Speech 2018

Creativity

Too often in education, the content piece overshadows creativity as students strive to present the “right” answer. Innovation and creativity may be squashed in a system that offers a specific rubric that rewards students for linear responses to demonstrate knowledge and understanding. However, creativity is an integral part of problem solving and resourcefulness, both marketable traits for professional success, and should be cultivated.

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