Fixing College Education: A New Curriculum for the Twenty-first Century

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University of Virginia Press, Aug 13, 2009 - Political Science - 176 pages

Since his early days at the University of California, Berkeley, when he was fired for refusing to sign a loyalty oath during the Red Scare, Charles Muscatine has been a dedicated teacher and higher education reformer. Upon his reinstatement at Berkeley, he founded "Strawberry Creek College," a six-year experiment using full professors and small classes to teach lower-division students. Drawing on this belief in undergraduate teaching, Muscatine’s new book now offers a radical new design for American college education.

Muscatine begins with the observation that the mediocre undergraduate curriculum offered by most colleges and universities today is based on outdated ideas of what should be taught and what constitutes good teaching. Although Muscatine is himself a well-established research scholar, he contends that the publish-or-perish "research religion" of college and university faculties has seriously damaged undergraduate education. He offers a clear distinction between publishable research and the scholarship necessary for good teaching. Furthermore, he recommends major changes in the education of professors, including reconsidering both the requirement of the book-length dissertation and the current organization of graduate departments.

Fixing College Education predicts new roles for students and faculty, redefines educational breadth and depth, and calls for deeper assessment of learning and teaching. Muscatine highlights the outstanding colleges and universities, including Harvard, Boston University’s University Professor’s Program, Evergreen State College, and Fairhaven College at Western Washington University, that have already remade their curricula successfully or adopted features like the ones he proposes. Muscatine argues that the new curriculum is better able than the old to produce good scholars and good citizens for the twenty-first century.

 

Contents

Whats Wrong with College
1
An Environment for Learning
11
Faculty Responsibility to Students
36
A Curriculum Design for the Future
43
Toward a New Curriculum Colleges with Innovative Features
63
The New Curriculum Some Innovative Colleges
75
Research Scholarship Teaching and the Education of Professors
97
Final Problems
120
Evergreen State College Sample Course Descriptions
137
Source Notes
143
Index
161
Copyright

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About the author (2009)

Charles Muscatine is Professor of English Emeritus at the University of California at Berkeley, where he taught for forty-three years.

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