Purpose-guided education

Purpose-guided education prioritizes intrinsic motivation and helps students to become more engaged in learning experiences through connecting their beliefs and life goals to curricular requirements. Jerry Pattengale first coined the phrase “purpose-guided education”, and began its application at Indiana Wesleyan University in 1997. The graduation rates increased over 20% during the next ten years, and ensuing publications, collaborative research projects, and other scholarly activities gained national attention. The Center for Life Calling and Leadership[1] is perhaps the most visible manifestation of this educational philosophy. Key books include Why I Teach,[2] The Purpose-Guided Student,[3] The Explorer’s Guide,[4] and the basic thesis of Educating Students Purposefully.[5] Pattengale began questioning aspects of the prevailing approach to student success, as noted in “Student Success or Student Non-Dissatisfaction”.[6] Through surveying over 400 institutions he discovered that over 90% of them based their student success approach on student satisfaction surveys and external issues instead of intrinsic motivation. The original application of this student success approach is found in The Purpose-Guided Student.[3]

Purpose-guided education as a response to limited student success models

Pattengale contends that “Students are most at-risk when they have no clear understanding of the relevance of college to life after or outside of college. It is important to help alleviate obstacles to educational pursuits, and to address areas of dissatisfaction."[7] However, as noted in The Purpose-Guided Student, a fundamental objective should be for students to learn about their values and develop a sense of purpose. He argues that this sense of direction will overshadow dissatisfactions and help to sustain them in their challenges. This notion is similar to the maxim of the late Chip Anderson, co-author of Gallup’s StrengthsQuest, “If the Why is big enough, the How will show up.”[8]

The application of Purpose-Guided Education to the college student success discussion reflects a general theme among recent best-sellers and trends.

A battery of popular books reflects this idea of “beginning with the end in mind,” as Steven Covey champions in his Seven Habits for Highly Successful People. An increasing number of teachers and professors are shoving aside mainstay “student success” curriculum and making room for this Coveyistic genre. Themes throughout the texts of popular writers like John Maxwell, “Dr. Phil” and Parker Palmer imbibe this notion of “alignment,” or “merging” a person’s core with an articulated life purpose. Likewise, Alfie Kohn’s provocative best-seller, Punished by Rewards,[9] candidly chastises educators for focusing on external issues and incentives instead of intrinsic concerns. Denise Clark Pope’s Doing School likewise challenges the current educational steps to academic “success”,[10] a notion also implied in My Freshman Year.[11]

Purpose in the history of education

The irony of purpose-guided education, which Pattengale notes, is that it’s actually reclaiming the foundational tenets of education. Socrates’ mantra was that “The unexamined life is not worth living.” This examination, as outlined in The Purpose-Guided Student,[3] needs to occur against the backdrop of questions about the human condition, similar to those raised in the classics, and in recent thoughtful works dealing with the same. This need for a knowledge base in the purpose-guided model, making the best decisions based on the best available information, in endorsed in many corners of higher education. For example, Robert Maynard Hutchins, closely associated with the Great Books movement, was leery of any social or institutional commitments fueled by zeal without knowledge, and the latter came most notably through a study of the great thinkers through the ages—the “great conversation.” In 1970, he cautioned educators:

It is the absence of anything relevant in the current program of the multiversity that has produced this demand for relevance on the part of the young. When young people are asked, "What are you interested in?" they answer that they are interested in justice, they want justice for the Negro, they want justice for the Third World. If you say, "Well, what is justice?" they haven't any idea …. They are ignorant of the fact that there is a Great Conversation echoing back through history on the subject of justice.[12]

During the Middle Ages the trivium and quadrivium provided the curricular knowledge base to study Theology, “the Queen of the sciences.” Students were preparing to understand more fully their place in this world, and doing so through a deeper understanding of a higher (supernatural) power. In today’s universities, as UCLA’s H.E.R.I. reports on spirituality outline, the majority of students in the first decade of the 21st century place top importance on spirituality, though the shift has changed considerably from the Judeo-Christian version to a more general spirituality. Nonetheless, there is a heightened interest (like the Middle Ages) in understanding one’s place in this world. Numerous studies are trying to find the place once again in education for these metaphysical questions in the curriculum, and while there is a common theme among these “Why” questions, there is a wide range of suggested solutions. Some recent studies want merely to raise the questions, like Anthony Kronman’s Education’s End: Why Our Colleges and Universities Have Given Up on the Meaning of Life.[13] While this basic question resonates with purpose-guided education, Kronman’s solutions differ drastically in not providing a format for students to find, articulate and pursue their life purpose after the questions are raised. Recent scholarly works more aligned with purpose-guided education are Christian Smith’s Soul Searching: The Religious and Spiritual Lives of America’s Teenagers[14] and The Schooled Heart: Moral Formation in American Higher Education by Douglas Henry and Michael Beaty.[15]

Purpose-guided education at Indiana Wesleyan University

During the 1980s, considerable focus in education was placed on a student’s vocation (instead of career) and aligning life goals with curricular choices instead of following traditional majors without understanding one’s passions. Many schools, like Indiana Wesleyan University, began to focus on “whole-person development,” and became ripe for the research and development of a coherent educational philosophy based on the notion of purpose. The Lilly Endowment, Inc. funded a major Program for the Theological Exploration of Vocation initiative for universities to assist with helping students to understand better their life calling, or vocation.[16] Indiana Wesleyan University was one of the recipients of these grants, and the $5 million grant helped with the intense research and development underpinning purpose-guided education, and especially with the founding of the Center for Life Calling and Leadership, a general education curriculum with “Becoming Worldchangers” as its main course, a humanities-based first-year seminar. The entire education experience at Indiana Wesleyan is based on “World Changing Outcomes,” and involves learning experiences involving both faculty and student development, and includes a Dean of Mentoring and a Mentor Residence Hall.[17]

A longevity study of 1700 students conducted in conjunction with Indiana University’s Research Center validated the value of the purpose-guided curriculum, with positive odds ratios for every cohort studied, and some as high as 12% more likely to succeed than those not in the purpose-guided track.[18] Today, all IWU students go through some key aspect of the purpose-guided programs. Four key purpose-guided initiatives converged to aid student success efforts, and simultaneously to garner selection among the twelve “founding” (original) institutions in the Foundations of Excellence project.[19] These included the mentoring program, the first-year seminar, the Center for Life Calling and Leadership, and most recently, the Mentoring Hall. A dean and associate dean of mentoring were added in 1999 and 2001. The first-year seminar is required of all new students, included transfers. The Center for Life Calling and Leadership, with the aid of the Lilly Endowment, has become a true local, community, and national center. It provides a variety of services, including a curriculum and advising for all pre-declared students.[4]

See also

References

  1. Center for Life Calling and Leadership
  2. Pattengale, J. (2009) Why I Teach: And Why It Matters to My Students. New York: McGraw-Hill.
  3. 1 2 3 Pattengale, J. (2010, 2009 release) The Purpose-Guided Student: Dream to Succeed. New York: McGraw-Hill.
  4. 1 2 Millard, Bill. Explorer’s Guide: Starting Your College Journey with a Sense of Purpose. Dubuque, IA: Kendall/Hunt, 2007.
  5. Braskamp, L., L. Calian Trautvetter, and K. Ward (2006) Putting Students First: How Colleges Develop Students Purposefully. Anker Publishing.
  6. Pattengale, J. (2005) “Purpose-Guided Education: Student Success or Student non-Dissatisfaction,” plenary address at the Indiana chapter of the National Association of Developmental Education. Indianapolis: October 28, 2005.
  7. Pattengale, Jerry (with Phil Garner) “Intrinsic Motivation,” National Conference for Students in Transition, National Resource Center for the First-Year Experience (USC) Nov. 5, 2000, Cincinnati, OH.
  8. Anderson, C., Clifton, D. (2002) StrengthsQuest: Discover and Develop Your Strengths in Academics, Career, and Beyond. Gallup Press.
  9. Kohn, Alfie. (1999) Punished by rewards: The trouble with gold stars.
  10. Pope, D. (2003) Doing School: How We Are Creating a Generation of Stressed-Out, Materialistic, and Miseducated Students. Yale University Press.
  11. Pattengale, J. (2006) Student Success or Student Non-Dissatisfaction? Growth Journal, No. 6, 1325.
  12. Berwick, K. (1970) Interview with Robert M. Hutchins (transcript), “Don't Just Do Something.” Posted at the School of Cooperative Individualism: http://www.cooperativeindividualism.org/hutchins_on_center_democratic_institutions.html.
  13. Kronman, A. T. (2007) Education’s End: Why Our Colleges and Universities Have Given Up on the Meaning of Life. Yale University Press.
  14. Smith, C. A. (2005) Soul Searching: The Religious and Spiritual Lives of America’s Teenagers. Oxford Press.
  15. Henry, D. & M. Beaty (2008) The Schooled Heart: Moral Formation in American Higher Education. Waco, TX: Baylor University Press.
  16. http://www.ptev.org/indexer.aspx?sect=about&tid=-11&iid=14
  17. Pattengale, J., D. Sprowl, R. Thompson and K. Parker (2008, January 1) The Purpose-Guided Campus—Homework to Mentor Hall. Recruitment and Retention. Magna Publications.
  18. Reynolds, P., J. Gross, B. Millard, J. Pattengale (2005). Discovering life purpose: retention success in a leadership course at Indiana Wesleyan University. Indiana Project for Academic Success Research Brief. Bloomington: Smith Center for Research, Indiana University.
  19. Policy Center on the First Year of College, John Gardner, Director, Betsy Barefoot, Co-Director, located at Brevard College in Brevard, North Carolina. 28712. Phone: 828.966.5312, FAX: 828.883.4093, Web: http://www.brevard.edu/fyc.

Additional research

  1. Braxton, J. (ed.) (2000) Reworking the Student Departure Puzzle. Nashville, TN: Vanderbilt University Press.
  2. Fiske, E. (2004) Student success. Focus. Spring 2004: 423.
  3. Herzberg, F. (1991) Herzberg on Motivation. Penton Media Inc.
  4. Herzberg, F.. (2005) A summary of his work in, “Employee motivation, the organizational environment and productivity” at http://www.accel-team.com/human_relations/hrels_05_herzberg.html.
  5. Juillerat, S. “Assessing the Expectations and Satisfactions of Sophomores: The Data.” In Laurie A. Schreiner & Jerry Pattengale. (Eds.), Visible Solutions for Invisible Students. Helping Sophomores Succeed (Monograph No. 31). Columbia, SC: University of South Carolina, National Resource Center for the First-Year Experience and Students in Transition. 2000. Pages 95–133.
  6. Pattengale, J. and M. Boivin (1998) Using Assessment as an Intervention Process: The Master Teacher Project, CCCU National Assessment Conference, Lee University.
  7. Robbins, S. (1998) Organizational Behavior, Eighth Edition. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall. (for a summary of Herzberg).
  8. Snyder, C. R. (1994) Hope and Optimism. Encyclopedia of Human Behavior. Vol. 2. Academic Press. Pages 535542.
  9. Snyder, C. R. (1994) The psychology of hope: you can get there from here. New York, NY: The Free Press (Simon and Schuster).
  10. Snyder, C. R. (1995)“Conceptualizing, Measuring, and Nurturing Hope. Journal of Counseling and Development. 73 (January/February), 355360.
  11. Swing, R. L. ed. (2001) Proving and improving: Strategies for assessing the first college year (Monograph No. 33). Columbia, SC: University of South Carolina, National Resource Center for The First-Year Experience and Students in Transition.
  12. Trusty, J. & S. G. Niles (2004). Realized potential or lost talent: High-school variables and bachelor’s degree completion. Career Development Quarterly, 53, 215.
  13. Zlotkowski, E. (2002) Service-Learning and the First-Year Experience: Preparing Students for Personal Success and Civic Responsibility. Columbia, SC: University of South Carolina, National Resource Center for The First-Year Experience and Students in Transition.
  14. Hossler, D., M. Ziskin, J. Gross. “Getting Serious about Institutional Performance in Student Retention: Research-Based Lessons on Effective Policies and Practices.” About Campus (Vol. 13, no. 6): pp. 45 (“MRU”).

External links

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