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Catholic U. Pushes Homer; Faculty Say D'oh!

February 20, 2009

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Catholic University of America may soon have a new freshman curriculum, which some critics say amounts to a new commandment: Thou Shalt Read Homer.

Citing concerns about lagging retention rates, Provost James Brennan is pressing for a new program that would require first-year students to take three common courses, including a two-semester humanities class that focuses on works such as the Iliad, the Odyssey and the Bible. The First Year Experience program, which would group students into small learning communities to study and live together, is designed to improve retention, and in so doing help the tuition-driven institution shore up its financial base in difficult economic times.

“If we raise our retention 10 percentage points toward where we want to be, that would retrieve the money invested in this program within two years,” said Brennan, who anticipates initial expenses of about $1.7 million. “In a financial sense it’s almost a no brainer, but we’re doing it for other reasons. We’re doing it because in the long run we’re not meeting the expectations that students have when they come here. They’re [voting] with their feet.”

The outline of the program has already drawn critics, who say it was hastily crafted and shows no evidence of effectiveness. On the other hand, first year experience programs have gained increasing support in higher education, and Brennan suggests something has to change on campus if the university is going to move the needle on retention rates.

Catholic University loses about 20 percent of its students between their freshman and sophomore years, and another 10 percent between their sophomore and junior years, Brennan said.

The university has had particular problems retaining black students, who graduate at significantly lower rates than their white counterparts. Indeed, the six-year graduation rate for African American freshmen entering between 1994 and 2001 was an average of 29 percentage points lower than that of white students, according to university data. In 2000, the year of the largest graduation gap over a nine year period, the six-year black graduation rate was 25 percent, compared with 75 percent for white students.

The proposed program for freshmen doesn’t specifically deal with minority retention rates, but it is aimed to serve “millennials.” Brennan describes the traditional freshman at Catholic as a student who needs a lot of support transitioning from a nurturing home environment into an urban college setting in the heart of Washington.

“They really need a kind of structured [program] to help them navigate the complexities of a university,” he said. “This perhaps has become even more urgent with increasing years in the post-9/11 world, where so many of these students are buffered and protected and sheltered by others -- usually parents.”

The structure of the proposed program at Catholic borrows heavily from other first year experience programs, which have roots in the late 1800s and have gained momentum in the last 30 years. Students will be grouped into 18-person learning communities, sharing common dormitories, classes and advisers in their first year. Brennan aims to pilot the program in the fall and make it mandatory thereafter.

"No Confidence" in Plan

The First Year Experience plan, which generated quick controversy, was crafted by a nine-member faculty committee, mostly from the humanities. When it was first presented in December to the university’s Undergraduate Board, the board declined to even vote on an endorsement, calling the plan far too prescriptive and specific to be characterized as a rough "framework," as the committee had described it.

More recently, the School of Arts and Sciences passed a resolution pledging that the school wouldn’t incorporate the program into its curriculum because it “risks exacerbating retention problems rather than ameliorating them.” The Academic Council, which includes the chairs of all major departments in Arts and Sciences, passed its own motion expressing “no confidence” in the proposal. Faculty in the school are also discussing a vote of “no confidence” in the provost, according to two faculty members who asked to remain anonymous discussing such a sensitive matter.

Broadly described, faculty who object to the plan -- many of whom asked to remain anonymous -- say it saddles students with yet more required courses, decreasing their ability to explore diverse areas of study or incorporate minors. Much of the frustration, however, is tied to the process by which the plan unfolded. Critics charge that it was hastily crafted to be put into place by fall, giving little time for a true dialogue about a program that stands to become a cornerstone of the institution.

One faculty member described the plan as a “kind of bad knockoff” of the common freshman curriculum at Columbia University, where the chair of the committee that crafted the Catholic plan completed his doctorate.

“This was kind of brought out and put forward to everyone as a done deal,” the faculty member said.

If the process was flawed, however, it may be because there’s no precedent for incorporating an academic initiative across the entire university, according to Barry Yatt, associate dean for undergraduate studies for the School of Architecture and Planning.

“I don’t think [Provost Brennan] was trying to be evil in any way, shape or form, or even bypassing the system; we didn’t have a system,” said Yatt, who sits on the Undergraduate Board that declined to endorse the plan.

While Brennan said he’s open to further input, he maintains that the core elements of the plan -- the creation of learning communities and faculty acting as advisers for their freshmen students -- will remain intact. The proposal also prescribes that the teaching load be distributed between existing faculty, graduate students and a new class of full-time, non-tenure-track teaching faculty who will be required to have terminal degrees in their fields. Brennan plans to give these teaching faculty full health care benefits and salaries between $52,000 and $57,000 for nine-month appointments.

“I’m pretty confident that we’ll be able to hire some really accomplished people who are really good teachers and want to be teachers,” he said.

Lourdes Maria Alvarez, an associate professor of Spanish, said she’s unconvinced that the plan will be a magic bullet for the university’s retention woes. Indeed, she’s concerned that splitting students into small groups makes it less likely that members of underrepresented minority groups will interact with each other, potentially exacerbating retention problems that are already most prevalent in those groups.

“I am seriously concerned about a negative impact on minority students,” she said, “and then we add to that the whole idea of taking away choices, decreasing the likelihood that a Latino student majoring business could take Spanish.”

For First Year Experience programs to be effective, they have to be a true reflection of the “ethos” of the institution, according to Jennifer R. Keup, director of the National Resource Center for the First-Year Experience and Students in Transition at the University of South Carolina.

“It really should reflect the mission, the purpose, the ethos, the values, what that institution is and who that student will be by being an involved integrated member of that institutional environment,” Keup said.

“It can be a very rich discussion,” she added. “Sometimes it can be a little contentious.”

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Comments on Catholic U. Pushes Homer; Faculty Say D'oh!

  • purpose-guided education
  • Posted by Jerry Pattengale , Assistant Provost at Indiana Wesleyan University on February 20, 2009 at 7:05am EST
  • Jack, Dr. Keup's comments reflect the common wisdom in this field, and with any major curricular revision, changes either stem from or threaten an ethos. In addition to the wide range and strong archive of materials that speak to these questions at the National Research Center (USC), the process that the Foundations of Excellence program takes universities through guarantees wide-campus input and strong assessment checks (NC). It also looks closely at all student groups, and is perhaps the best I've seen in addressing ethnic differences. The F.O.E. program also can help with accreditation. As for pushing Homer (if I'm reading the CU humanities push correctly) considerable research is showing that purpose-guided education is working with millennials (of all cohorts). At IWU, the retention and graduation rates increased around 20% since this concentrated effort on purpose with first-year students. As for Catholic U's retention rates, they're still above the national average, though not at the standards we'd hope for such a fine university. I applaud them for tackling this issue, and will be interested to see if its plan stretches beyond the curriculum. For sophomore year woes (which again, CU is better than many), see Brad Cox's new Shedding Light on Sophomores, and John Gardner et al's forthcoming JB book, Helping Sophomores (fall release). jp

  • Posted by km on February 20, 2009 at 8:45am EST
  • Catholic is trying something that hundreds of institutions have been incorporating for years. Welcome to the 21st century. No wonder there's a retention problem that some at that insitution are trying to address. It sounds like (a) they are a little behind times and (b) faculty don't seem to have any better plan.

  • Posted by JS on February 20, 2009 at 9:15am EST
  • I'm all for initiatives in the DC area that create more teaching jobs with salaries and benefits for those of us in the humanities. I hope this freshman-year plan comes to fruition!

  • Posted by Samantha on February 20, 2009 at 10:05am EST
  • I concur with the support offered above for the Foundations of Excellence program. It is offering institutions the gold standard in first year experiences programs. It is based on sound research and has an outstanding track record from with excellent data from multiple participating institutions on retention rates not only between the first and second years but between the third and fourth. My institution is currently in the first year of the Foundations of Excellence program and has over 200 faculty and staff excited about and engaged in developing a first year experience that will have broad support across campus. Catholic U. should cancel the rollout of its new program and get signed into the next cohort starting the Foundations of Excellence program.

  • Posted by Yogi on February 20, 2009 at 11:10am EST
  • As a former educational administrator and a current business owner, it still astounds me that folks in the higher education feel it necessary to spend years examining issues and building consensus. Get your heads out of the sand and climb down from your ivory towers. This is not the way decisions are made in the real world, and this is not the way decisions should be made in multi-million dollar educational enterprises.

  • Non retention
  • Posted by W on February 20, 2009 at 11:10am EST
  • As a student at Catholic, I could sum up in one sentence why the school has problems with retention: It's too freaking expensive! At roughly $1000/credit for tuition, plus room and board, plus the countless other expenses, a student who manages to make it through a year at Catholic spending only $10,000 is ahead of the curve.
    To be fair, the education is truly excellent, especially in the humanities. But that's really all that's excellent about Catholic. The services quite frankly suck. The food is terrible, the student housing is wretched, and all of the staff I've ever run into in every service is either rude or incompetent or very often both.
    But clearly making freshmen read Homer will offset these problems...

  • FYE
  • Posted by Math Prof on February 20, 2009 at 11:50am EST
  • I am working on a "dimension" committee at my university for a FYE program. The FOE process is highly structured and designed to lead to predetermined conclusions. At least on my campus the committees are dominated by staff from student affairs with only tokin faculty input.

    My general impression of the FYE movemnet is that is it just another fad, like Core Curriculum movement, that will make little differnce on large state campuses. (At small colleges these programs make more sense.)

    This doesn't mean there are no good ideas in the FYE movement. Structured learning communities may indeed help, but trying to make one-size-fits-all FYEs are likely to do as much harm as good.

  • Purpose and Homer
  • Posted by Guez on February 20, 2009 at 12:45pm EST
  • Mr. Pattengale responds to the push for Homer with an appeal to "purpose-guided education" but doesn't really elaborate. Does the focus on the classics detract from, or contribute to, developing a sense of purpose among freshmen? Or does it depend?

  • To Yogi:
  • Posted by Kevin on February 20, 2009 at 2:10pm EST
  • Yes, Yogi -- the way that decisions are made in the real world is all too clear -- bleed the company, the country, and the economy for all that you can get and then get out of Dodge before anyone can hold you accountable.

    Applying the "real world" of unethical corporate business has been a tragedy for higher education, much less health care and the the business world itself.

    I applaud the attempt by CUA to attempt to retain their students by guiding them through some of the fundamental works that have, for better or for worse, shaped western civilization.

  • Kevin
  • Posted by Yogi on February 20, 2009 at 3:00pm EST
  • Spoken like a true academician.

  • We don't want any integrationists here
  • Posted by Old fashioned liberal on February 20, 2009 at 3:50pm EST
  • "Lourdes Maria Alvarez ... [is] concerned that splitting students into small groups makes it less likely that members of underrepresented minority groups will interact with each other, potentially exacerbating retention problems that are already most prevalent in those groups."

    It used to be racist whites who promoted segregation. Now it's leftist minorities. But they're really the same under the skin: people who want to preserve their own power at the expense of young people.

  • Posted by Dr. Anonymous on February 23, 2009 at 4:04pm EST
  • I strongly support the freshman year initiative at Catholic. However, if you really want to solve the retention problem, simply admit students only on the basis of merit. Then, you will have fewer minority students and, consequently, a lower percentage of dropout.

  • Retention shouldn't be the main issue
  • Posted by Craig Bernthal , Professor/English at CSU Fresno on February 25, 2009 at 6:00pm EST
  • The main issue for Catholic University ought to be the quality of the experience it offers to its students in their freshman year, not retention. But it is somewhat comforting to know that the undergraduate committee at CU is as mediocre (is "corrupt" to strong a word) in its expectations as the parallel committee would be here at Fresno State. Sometimes I get depressed because I think I'm in a really inferior institution, but then an article like this comes along . . .

  • The Freshman Cluster goes to college
  • Posted by Roboteacher on February 26, 2009 at 1:30pm EST
  • The Freshman Cluster or Freshman Academy is a strategy that High Schools learned from effective middle schools. The concept puts small groups of students into several common classes, creating a cohort that moves through the unfamiliar and daunting world of college together, ctreating mutual support and commomality of purpose that help ease the transition from the nurturing home and school environment to the "OK Kid, Here's your schedule, here's a campus map, see you at graduation in six years" environment of college. K-12 educators have long since recognized that it's at the transition points - moving from elementary into Jr. High, Moving from Jr. High or Middle School into High School, and moving from High School into the Post-secondary world that we lose students.Any program that helps ease those transitions and helps support students across those gulfs should be lauded and applauded.

    Another facet of The Freshman Cluster is teachers sharing common planning time to discuss and guide their group of students' progress, but, of course, college faculty are far too important, busy, and self-involved to actually collaborate with their colleagues to make sure their students are given the best chance to succeed.

  • Dr. Anonymous is not only cynical, he or she is a racist
  • Posted by Lisa Weihman , Assoc. Prof at WVU on March 12, 2009 at 1:15pm EDT
  • How despicable to assume that higher standards will disproportionally impact minority student success.

    Hiram College began an "Ideas of the West" program over 20 years ago, when I was an undergrad there... at the advent of all these First Year Iniative programs. I believe NYU does something similar, with shared texts and cultural experiences for new students. While the choice of texts may be controversial in this particular case, the idea of having a common thread of texts for all entering students is certainly something many other schools have been doing for decades now, and I suspect it does help students make the transition from high school to college-level work. Community building is always a necessary exercise in any academic setting.

    As someone who teaches British and Irish modernism most semesters, I know that a thorough grounding in Homer, the Bible, Milton and Shakespeare makes for an easier time in most literature classes. Diversity of thought and perspective is undermined only if education stops with these texts and authors; there's nothing inherently wrong with recognizing and examining the extent to which "the western canon" (however hastily or insufficiently defined) has been and remains influential within the academia (if not the larger world we live in).