The Role of Responsibility in the Curriculum

Solid majorities of students and campus professionals (professors, academic administrators and student affairs staff) believe that colleges should teach personal and social responsibility, but many doubt that such teaching is actually taking place. Those are the preliminary results of a survey released Thursday by the Association of American Colleges and Universities.

The survey was conducted at 23 institutions that participate in the Templeton Foundation supported project Core Commitments: Educating Students for Personal and Social Responsibility. While those institutions might be expected to have a common interest in these issues, they are diverse in terms of geography, sector and mission, including two- and four-year institutions, public and private, professionally oriented and liberal arts focused.

Here are results that show the gap between what students and campus professionals think should be a focus and is actually a focus.

Personal Responsibility: What Should Be a Focus vs. What Is a Focus

 

Students Who Believe Topic Should Be Major Focus

Students Who Believe Topic Is Major Focus

Professionals Who Believe Topic Should Be Major Focus

Professionals Who Believe Topic Is Major Focus

Striving for excellence

65.2%

39.0%

74.7%

33.8%

Cultivating personal and academic integrity

71.4%

51.2%

87.6%

46.6%

Contributing to a larger community

56.0%

39.6%

73.1%

43.8%

Taking seriously the perspectives of others

58.2%

32.6%

76.2%

33.4%

Refining ethical and moral reasoning

52.8%

30.2%

71.8%

32.7%

While the percentages differed, students and professionals were generally in agreement on which items should be a focus and which are a focus. But on another set of questions, on whether students improve in college on certain dimensions, students generally gave themselves better grades than did campus professionals.

Percentage Believing Students Leave College With Stronger/Better...

 

Students

Campus Professionals

Work ethic

42.8%

28.2%

Understanding of academic integrity

48.2%

46.5%

Understanding of personal integrity

52.5%

42.0%

Awareness of the importance of contributing to the greater good

33.6%

42.7%

Capacity to learn from diverse others

53.3%

39.8%

Capacity for ethical and moral reasoning

47.9%

36.8%

The AAC&U report on the results notes that such surveys “are vital to examining the ‘real’ vs. the ‘ideal view of campus environments,” and expresses hope that the differences may prompt discussions at individual institutions.

Scott Jaschik

The original story and user comments can be viewed online at http://insidehighered.com/news/2008/04/18/aacu.