11.07.2015 Views

journal of public affairs education - NASPAA *The Global Standard ...

journal of public affairs education - NASPAA *The Global Standard ...

journal of public affairs education - NASPAA *The Global Standard ...

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS
  • No tags were found...

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

Badgers & Hoosiers: An Interstate Collaborative Learning Experience ConnectingMPA Students in Wisconsin and IndianaCOLLABORATIVE LEARNING VALUESWe contend that collaborative learning is a valuable use <strong>of</strong> instructional timebecause <strong>of</strong> the following:1. Teachers cannot simply transfer knowledge to students. Meaningful andlasting learning occurs via personal, active engagement,2. Many employers consider the willingness to engage in productiveteamwork to be a requirement for success,3. Our increasingly diverse society requires engaged citizens who canappreciate and benefit from different perspectives, and4. Collaborative learning personally and actively engages students <strong>of</strong> allbackgrounds (Barkley, Cross, & Major, 2005, pp. xi-xii).FALL SEMESTER 2007One <strong>of</strong> the more challenging aspects <strong>of</strong> managing this kind <strong>of</strong> collaborativelearning experience is finding a project in which students from different classescan jointly participate. While the instructors had shared ideas for in-classactivities (i.e., the chopstick exercise), they had not worked together before on aproject that would involve class members in different locations interacting witheach other directly. Searching for an appropriate shared activity came to an endin early September, 2007, when King received an e-mail from the InternationalCity/County Managers Association (ICMA) with the headline “Get Published!ICMA Press Seeks Proposals for Case Studies.” This announcement described anexcellent opportunity for students to work with each other on a “real life”project. This is how it happened:1. Each class was divided into six groups <strong>of</strong> four or five students.2. Each group prepared a one-page abstract for an extended case study thatcould be submitted to ICMA for consideration. Groups wereencouraged to draw on their personal experiences and local observationswhen choosing a case to study.3. Student groups from one institution electronically submitted theirabstracts to pre-selected groups in the other institution’s partneringMPA class.4. The groups then electronically provided each other with 1-2 pages <strong>of</strong>written feedback on the submitted abstracts.5. Finally, group members in both classes were asked, as part <strong>of</strong> theirindividual classes, to evaluate how useful the feedback was in improvingtheir abstracts.No other class assignments were collaborative in nature, and in fact theydiffered greatly from each other. For example, UOW students were required todevelop a 3,000-word, extended case study based on the abstract, and to submitit for a grade, an experience that IUN students did not have.While instructors and students felt that this experiment was generally352 Journal <strong>of</strong> Public Affairs Education

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!