Cover image for The learning paradigm college
Title:
The learning paradigm college
Personal Author:
Publication Information:
New York, NY. : Jossey Bass, 2003
Physical Description:
xviii, 379 p. : ill. ; 24 cm.
ISBN:
9781882982585
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30000010183004 LB2331 T24 2003 Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

In The Learning Paradigm College , John Tagg builds on the ground-breaking Change magazine article he coauthored with Robert Barr in 1995, "From Teaching to Learning; A New Paradigm for Undergraduate Education." That piece defined a paradigm shift happening in American higher education, placing more importance on learning outcomes and less on the quantity of instruction. As Tagg defines it, "Where the Instruction Paradigm highlights formal processes, the Learning Paradigm emphasizes results or outcomes. Where the Instruction Paradigm attends to classes, the Learning Paradigm attends to students."

The Learning Paradigm College presents a new lens through which faculty and administrators can see their own institutions and their own work. The book examines existing functional frameworks and offers a way to reenvision and recast many familiar aspects of college work and college life, so that readers may better understand their learners and move toward a framework that focuses on learning outcomes.

Divided into five parts, the book introduces the Learning Paradigm, concentrates on understanding our learners, provides a framework for producing learning, discusses the six essential features of the Learning Paradigm college, and focuses on how to become a Learning Paradigm college.

Eminently clear and accessible descriptions of the features of the Learning Paradigm are paired with examples of how institutions of higher education around the country are transforming themselves into Learning Paradigm colleges. The Learning Paradigm College is both hopeful and realistic about what all those involved in higher education can achieve.


Author Notes

JOHN TAGG is Associate Professor of English at Palomar College in San Macros, California. He is coauthor, with Robert B. Barr, of "From Teaching to Learning: A New Paradigm for Undergraduate Education" (Change, 1995). For the past several years, he has conducted workshops and made presentations at many colleges and universities or organizational transformation and the Learning Paradigm.


Table of Contents

Dedication
About the Author
Foreword.Preface
Acknowledgments
Part I A New Paradigm?
1 The Challenge
2 The Problem of Scale: Why Innovations Don't Transform Colleges
3 The Instruction Paradigm: Process Before Purpose
4 The Route to Transformation: The Learning Paradigm, Old and New
Part II The Foundation: The Learners and the Learning
5 The Learners
6 Self-Theories and Academic Motivation
7 Approaches to Learning
Part III The Learning Environment of the College
8 The Whole That Determines the Parts
9 The Cognitive Economy of the Instruction Paradigm College
Part IV A Design for Learning
10 The Cognitive Economy of the Learning Paradigm College
11 A Learning Paradigm College Promotes Intrinsically Rewarding Goals
12 A Learning Paradigm College Requires Frequent, Continual, Connected, and Authentic Student Performances
13 A Learning Paradigm College Provides Consistent, Continual, Interactive Feedback to Students
14 A Learning Paradigm College Provides a Long Time Horizon for Learning
15 A Learning Paradigm College Creates Purposeful Communities of Practice
16 A Learning Paradigm College Aligns All of Its Activities Around the Mission of Producing Student Learning
Part V Transforming the College
17 Barriers to Transformation
18 Scaffolding for Change
19 The Golden Rule
References
Index