EMU's
General Education Program makes progress in first
year
Eastern Michigan University economics professor Sharon
Erenburg usually gives multiple-choice tests to the 70-plus
students in her "Principles of Macroeconomics" class. The
class size just doesn't lend itself to a lot of writing
assignments.
But last fall, as part of a pilot assessment of Eastern
Michigan's revised General Education standards, Erenburg
tried something different with one section of the class.
 |
MAKING STRIDES: Eastern Michigan University
professors report successes in their new General
Education Program classes or have plans to adapt
existing classes. The 2007-08 academic year was
the first for EMU's new General Education Program,
which is outcome-based and takes learning beyond
the traditional
classroom. |
She had her students in her class read an article from
CNNMoney.com about the Federal Reserve lowering interest
rates. Then, in an assignment worth 20 percent of their
grade, they had to explain, in detail, the role of the
central bank and the effect of that rate decrease on the
economy.
She also set up a rubric that specified how much detail
and accuracy they needed on each question to get an "A",
or a "B", and so on.
"It was interesting," she said. "The cooperation
level was extremely high. They really got into this assignment.
I don't know if its because I told them it was part of
a pilot, but they really seemed to appreciate the rubric
itself and the opportunity to write and analyze as opposed
to just coming in to take a multiple-choice test."
The first year under EMU's new general education requirements
is filled with these kinds of stories, example after example
of points where the academic rubber meets the real-world
road.
More on this story...
