Campus News
Course Joins Students and Alumni in the Classroom
March 9, 2016
Lisa Gulasy
Photo credit: Tanya Rosen-Jones 鈥97
From special events such as to online forums such as , current students and alumni have many opportunities to engage with one another in casual settings. Rarely, however, are students and alumni able to share their experiences and opinions in the classroom.
The fall 2015 semester presented one such rare opportunity in the form of the course The Past and Future of Higher Education. Led by Steve Volk, professor of history and director of the Center for Teaching Innovation and Excellence, the primary goal of the course was to generate an informed intergenerational discussion about the history of U.S. higher education, its current state, and its possible future. Fifteen current students, seven alumni, three staff members, and one faculty member were enrolled in the weekly course. Those on campus convened in the Mudd Learning Center conference room, and the alumni were brought into the course by means of Zoom, a Skype-like software.
Volk, who was named and has taught at 91直播 for nearly 30 years, says he was interested in teaching this course in the fall semester for several reasons. First, though he has been engaged in issues of pedagogy via his role with the Center for Teaching Innovation and Excellence for the past eight years, he had never taught the subject of higher education. Second, the semester was Volk鈥檚 last on campus as a professor, and he wanted to try teaching in an entirely new way. And third, as course participant David Rehm 鈥83 says, the timing for a course that examined higher education was incredibly ideal.
鈥淵ou couldn鈥檛 have picked a better time to do this course. Higher education is always in the news,鈥 says Rehm, at that time Mount St. Mary鈥檚 University provost. 鈥淪o many discussions we had were timely and relevant.鈥
Volk alerted alumni of the course offering with help from the 91直播 College Alumni Association. described the course, outlined expectations of alumni participants, and hosted a submission form. 鈥淚 got about 40 applications for what were supposed to be five openings,鈥 Volk says. He says he narrowed the applicant pool based on two requirements: 鈥淚 wanted a demographic survey, and I wanted alumni participants to be involved in some aspect of higher education. So I ended up with at least one person who graduated in the 60s, 70s, 80s, 90s, and 00s, and among them was a high school counselor, a university provost, a dean of students, a university librarian. All were from different places and in different time zones.鈥
According to Volk, most of the 15-week course was spent examining the current state of higher education and the issues that affect it. These discussions were primarily led by two or three students with Volk interjecting as needed.
Elena Robakiewicz, a senior geology major with a minor in history enrolled in the course, helped lead a discussion on microaggressions. 鈥淚t was a hard discussion to lead because the topic is controversial and because microaggressions are such a new concept. Even alums who graduated fewer than 10 years ago had no connections with what microaggressions are,鈥 she says. 鈥淏ut it was a really cool class because we were able to show how the media portray microaggressions is not at all what college students believe they are.鈥
鈥淓very week, the topic seemed to be on things that were happening on campus,鈥 Volk says. 鈥淔or example, we discussed diversity of faculty. We talked about the pipeline that prepares these faculty and what could happen to historically black colleges and universities if all universities are trying to hire more faculty of color. The students got a greater understanding of the difficulty of reaching demands, and the alumni were incredibly impressed with how passionate and thoughtful the students were when discussing these topics.鈥
Robakiewicz says having alumni and faculty and staff involved in these discussions had a significant impact on how students thought about these issues, and vice versa. 鈥淵ou have the students who know what鈥檚 going on campus and then you have people in the real world. Having that combination was really helpful because, unless you are a student, you really don鈥檛 know what鈥檚 happening on college campuses, and when you鈥檙e a student, it鈥檚 so easy to be consumed in what鈥檚 going on campus and not really see the bigger picture.鈥
鈥淪tudent perspectives on social justice issues鈥攔ace, gender, class, and others鈥攐ftentimes differed significantly from alumni perspectives, but I was continually impressed with how articulate and thoughtful students were in presenting their arguments,鈥 says Michael Emerson Dirda 鈥09, head of executive communications at University of California, Berkeley. 鈥淚 think they made several alumni reconsider their own viewpoints on things like safe spaces and trigger warnings.鈥
鈥淥ne of the coolest thing about this course was that non-students were able to have conversations with us and realize, 鈥極h, they鈥檙e actually thinking. They鈥檙e not always complaining,鈥 which is really how our generation has been labeled at this point,鈥 Robakiewicz says.
Volk says the course was ideal for attracting alumni because so many of those in the 91直播 community pursue careers in higher education. He additionally says so many alumni applied because returning to the classroom is many alum鈥檚 preferred way to engage with their alma mater. 鈥淲hat alumni know of their college was their experience in the classroom. And so when alumni are interested in engaging with their college, they could certainly listen to a streamed concert or watch Commencement. But to actually be inside a live class with students, that is what I think they want.鈥
Dirda, Rehm, and soon-to-be-alumna Robakiewicz all agree, as they say they would all be interested in taking a course that includes students, alumni, and faculty and staff again. 鈥淲e shouldn't think of our conception of the classroom as immutable,鈥 Dirda says. 鈥淚nvolving alumni in a course can be fulfilling for the alumni, professor, and students. Learning alongside 91直播 students from an 91直播 professor provides a meaningful and substantive way for alumni to connect with their alma mater.鈥
鈥淭here鈥檚 something almost sacred about the classroom,鈥 Rehm says 鈥淭he ability to speak one鈥檚 perspective in a civilized manner while being required to consider those with different perspectives, listen to what others have to say, and be informed by their views, those spaces aren鈥檛 easily found in the world. I think that鈥檚 special, and I think that would attract other alums to take classes like this.鈥
Volk says he is not aware of any faculty planning a similar course at this time, but he says any faculty member is capable of doing so. 鈥淭echnology as a way to connect alumni to students and students to alumni, that is the future of higher education,鈥 he says. 鈥淭his is a model that can work for any faculty who teach on contemporary issues.鈥 Volk encourages any faculty who are interested in leading a course like this to write to him at svolk@oberlin.edu.
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