ANTIOCH COLLEGE. Rethinking the Liberal Arts

Similar documents
Michigan State University

Higher Education. Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education. November 3, 2017

Online Master of Business Administration (MBA)

Davidson College Library Strategic Plan

Testimony to the U.S. Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions. John White, Louisiana State Superintendent of Education

An Introduction to LEAP

OHIO STATE S STRATEGIC PLAN TIME AND CHANGE. Enable, Empower and Inspire

Master of Science (MS) in Education with a specialization in. Leadership in Educational Administration

Innovating Toward a Vibrant Learning Ecosystem:

OFFICE OF ENROLLMENT MANAGEMENT. Annual Report

Executive Summary. DoDEA Virtual High School

Invest in CUNY Community Colleges

The Dropout Crisis is a National Issue

Harness the power of public media and partnerships for the digital age. WQED Multimedia Strategic Plan

Executive Summary. Marian Catholic High School. Mr. Steven Tortorello, Principal 700 Ashland Avenue Chicago Heights, IL

WASHINGTON COLLEGE SAVINGS

Wide Open Access: Information Literacy within Resource Sharing

FORT HAYS STATE UNIVERSITY AT DODGE CITY

BARUCH RANKINGS: *Named Standout Institution by the

BASIC EDUCATION IN GHANA IN THE POST-REFORM PERIOD

Director, Ohio State Agricultural Technical Institute

Paying for. Cosmetology School S C H O O L B E AU T Y. Financing your new life. beautyschoolnetwork.com pg 1

Post-Master s Certificate in. Leadership for Higher Education

Data Glossary. Summa Cum Laude: the top 2% of each college's distribution of cumulative GPAs for the graduating cohort. Academic Honors (Latin Honors)

California Professional Standards for Education Leaders (CPSELs)

STRENGTHENING RURAL CANADA COMMUNITY: SALMO, BRITISH COLUMBIA

Priorities for CBHS Draft 8/22/17

Texas Woman s University Libraries

WORK OF LEADERS GROUP REPORT

DRAFT Strategic Plan INTERNAL CONSULTATION DOCUMENT. University of Waterloo. Faculty of Mathematics

The University of North Carolina Strategic Plan Online Survey and Public Forums Executive Summary

A Financial Model to Support the Future of The California State University

Testimony in front of the Assembly Committee on Jobs and the Economy Special Session Assembly Bill 1 Ray Cross, UW System President August 3, 2017

Capitalism and Higher Education: A Failed Relationship

Teach For America alumni 37,000+ Alumni working full-time in education or with low-income communities 86%

COMMUNITY VITALITY DIRECTOR

University of Central Florida Board of Trustees Finance and Facilities Committee

A Framework for Articulating New Library Roles

GRAND CHALLENGES SCHOLARS PROGRAM

Graduation Initiative 2025 Goals San Jose State

Financial aid: Degree-seeking undergraduates, FY15-16 CU-Boulder Office of Data Analytics, Institutional Research March 2017

November 6, Re: Higher Education Provisions in H.R. 1, the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. Dear Chairman Brady and Ranking Member Neal:

Lincoln School Kathmandu, Nepal

STUDENT EXPERIENCE a focus group guide

Communication Disorders Program. Strategic Plan January 2012 December 2016

WHY GO TO GRADUATE SCHOOL?

Date: 9:00 am April 13, 2016, Attendance: Mignone, Pothering, Keller, LaVasseur, Hettinger, Hansen, Finnan, Cabot, Jones Guest: Roof

Bellevue University Bellevue, NE

San Diego State University Division of Undergraduate Studies Sustainability Center Sustainability Center Assistant Position Description

University of Maine at Augusta Augusta, ME

2015 Academic Program Review. School of Natural Resources University of Nebraska Lincoln

VOL VISION 2020 STRATEGIC PLAN IMPLEMENTATION

Elevate. Impact. A Strategic Plan for WPI

EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT

LEN HIGHTOWER, Ph.D.

College of Agriculture / K-State Research and Extension

CAMPUS PROFILE MEET OUR STUDENTS UNDERGRADUATE ADMISSIONS. The average age of undergraduates is 21; 78% are 22 years or younger.

Interview on Quality Education

Building a Vibrant Alumni Network

Fearless Change -- Patterns for Introducing New Ideas

Executive Summary. Laurel County School District. Dr. Doug Bennett, Superintendent 718 N Main St London, KY

In 2010, the Teach Plus-Indianapolis Teaching Policy Fellows, a cohort of early career educators teaching

Education in Armenia. Mher Melik-Baxshian I. INTRODUCTION

Executive Summary. Lincoln Middle Academy of Excellence

Azusa Pacific University Azusa, CA

CHESTER FRITZ AUDITORIUM REPORT

The Colorado Promise

PUBLIC INFORMATION POLICY

$33 7,704 DONORS GAVE BETWEEN $1.00 AND $5 MILLION CHAIRS SUPPORTED

Fostering Equity and Student Success in Higher Education

Leveraging MOOCs to bring entrepreneurship and innovation to everyone on campus

Chronicle. CSN Connections:

Opening Doors. Strategic Plan 2016 through Bishop Dunne Catholic School

Worldwide Online Training for Coaches: the CTI Success Story

Master of Science in Taxation (M.S.T.) Program

SEARCH PROSPECTUS: Dean of the College of Law

Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art (NAMA) Director of Education and Interpretive Programs

March 28, To Zone Chairs and Zone Delegates to the USA Water Polo General Assembly:

HIGHER EDUCATION IN POLAND

Value of Athletics in Higher Education March Prepared by Edward J. Ray, President Oregon State University

St. John Fisher College Rochester, NY

CLASS EXODUS. The alumni giving rate has dropped 50 percent over the last 20 years. How can you rethink your value to graduates?

STRATEGIC GROWTH FROM THE BASE OF THE PYRAMID

Trends & Issues Report

A Diverse Student Body

FRANKLIN D. CHAMBERS,

ABET Criteria for Accrediting Computer Science Programs

Curricular Reviews: Harvard, Yale & Princeton. DUE Meeting

Understanding Co operatives Through Research

Swinburne University of Technology 2020 Plan

Volunteer State Community College Strategic Plan,

University of Toronto Mississauga Degree Level Expectations. Preamble

Meek School of Journalism and New Media Will Norton, Jr., Professor and Dean Mission. Core Values

EUROPEAN UNIVERSITIES LOOKING FORWARD WITH CONFIDENCE PRAGUE DECLARATION 2009

BUSINESS HONORS PROGRAM

Mary Washington 2020: Excellence. Impact. Distinction.

SUNY Downstate Medical Center Brooklyn, NY

Capital Campaign Progress Report. June 2015

THE ST. OLAF COLLEGE LIBRARIES FRAMEWORK FOR THE FUTURE

Trends in College Pricing

Transcription:

ANTIOCH COLLEGE Rethinking the Liberal Arts a

We serve a new generation of college-goers. 30% non-white student body 28% first generation students vs. a private college national average of 13% 45% Pell-eligible vs. a peer college average of 20% 95% of costs covered for our neediest students 91% retention, fall-to-fall vs. a peer college average of 88% b

Our Purpose Educating a New Generation It s time to rethink the ivory tower. There s a new generation of college students. Today, the majority of K-12 students are non-white. Of entering college freshmen, 30% are first-generation. 24% are first-generation and low-income. These numbers will rise dramatically over the next decade. But the system of higher education is not adequately serving these students. In an era when a vast majority of well-paying jobs require a college degree, only 30% of low-income students enroll in educational programs after high school. And only 9% will earn a degree within six years. It s not surprising that we re facing unprecedented economic disparity in America. 1

We have a groundbreaking new vision. As a community of social innovators, we re creating a new model for higher education one that addresses some of the most pressing issues facing higher ed today. Our vision for the 21st Century Antioch College will: 1. Utilize experiential curriculum and programming to better serve the specific needs of new-era students and promote a deeper engagement with the world. 2. Foster the discovery of curricular and structural innovations that can be scaled and shared with other institutions of higher education and create bridges to K-12 educators and students in communities of need. 3. Operate from a sustainable financial model that maximizes resources, cultivates community engagement, and ensures we don t become heavily reliant on tuition. 4. Act consistently with what we teach as an informed community of students, educators, staff and citizens of Yellow Springs. 2

And we re poised for action. Antioch College reopened its doors in 2011 as a brand new college. This gives us a distinct edge not found at other academic institutions. As a start-up, we re nimble and able to take risks. And we know from recent experience as well as Antioch s history that disruption can yield positive change: + Originally founded in 1850, Antioch was the first coeducational, nonsectarian liberal arts institution founded in America. + Noted public education pioneer Horace Mann served as Antioch s first president, instilling our credo: Be ashamed to die until you have won some victory for humanity. + Antioch was the first coeducational college to offer baccalaureate degrees to women and African Americans. + Antioch has been immersing students in the real world since the 1920s with its groundbreaking program of Cooperative Education. This legacy of social innovation emboldens our present purpose to serve a new generation of college students in new and better ways. The pages that follow show some of the ways we re turning our vision for a 21st Century liberal arts college into reality. 3

CLASSROOM & BEYOND Experience-Based Curriculum 36% of students do not demonstrate any significant improvement in learning during their four years in college. Arum and Roksa: Academically Adrift 4 The Antioch student experience is different. For nine decades, the College has been proving the necessity of applied learning in a liberal arts education. With the integration of rigorous academics, job experience and social responsibility, our students have always been ready to engage with the world beyond our campus. Upon re-opening, we decided it was time to build on this legacy of educational innovation in order for our students to develop the necessary skills to succeed an increasingly complex world.

Learn by doing: Cooperative Education In the 1920s, then-president Arthur Morgan established the College s historic and groundbreaking program of Cooperative Education (co-op). Antioch is now the only liberal arts college in the nation that requires a full year s worth of paid co-op work for all students. Today s co-op program maintains the critical connection between liberal arts students and the world in meaningful ways: + Opportunity. Students pursue work experience aligned with classroom study in such diverse fields as public health, sustainable agriculture, rural development, the arts, and industry. + Travel. Co-op placements currently exist in 31 states, 14 countries and the District of Columbia. + Relevancy. Students align their interests and apply what they learn to real-world work. + Rigor. Four quarter-long employment experiences are required. Fourth quarter co-op is an international placement linked to a student s foreign language study. + Readiness. According to a National Association of Colleges and Employment study, students who participate in programs with paid employment opportunities (co-op) nearly double their chances of a job offer after graduation compared to other students. + Earning power. Students can earn up to $25,000 over the course of their four co-op quarters, which is part of Antioch s plan to make college more affordable. 5

Courses that matter: Global Seminars Committed to deeper learning, we launched Global Seminars as the centerpiece of our new curriculum to compel our students to engage in diverse approaches to problem-solving. Offered once a quarter, each Global Seminar provides an in-depth examination of local, national and global issues that demand our attention water, food, energy, health, governance or education. Classroom discussions, interactive lectures and collaborative final projects are immersive and challenging. Students must grapple with the economic, social, political, scientific, moral/ethical, and philosophical perspectives on the chosen course issue. Global Seminars coursework enables students to: + Engage in realistic contexts + Test and refine personal and collective knowledge constructions + See their needs and interests woven into learning activities + Demonstrate understanding through authentic performance in relevant contexts Students have the opportunity to continue their research interests in Continued Studies in Global Seminar (GSC) or engage in relevant field work through co-ops or other experiential learning projects. Four quarters of Global Seminars are a graduation requirement. Antioch is preparing students for a world that is hungry for thinkers and doers, for collaborative citizens who know how to engage with the biggest issues of our times. Global Seminars have been a natural addition to our experiential curriculum, helping students continue to draw connections between their interests, academics and the workplace. As we grow, we will continue to develop our campus as a learning laboratory and seek out immersive opportunities for students to test their knowledge and skills further afield. Synthesizing the connection between their interests and the workplace is crucial to improving themselves and the world they live in. 6

WE BOLDLY GO The ReinventED Lab + Incubator Part of our mission upon re-opening Antioch College was to empower a new generation of students to solve problems in their communities. But an honest look at America s liberal arts colleges revealed institutions designed to train future academics in positions of privilege not a diverse population of tomorrow s citizen leaders. We realized our mission was bigger than our campus alone. It would require leading the charge in restructuring higher education an endeavor we believe will have far-reaching benefits to all levels of society. 7

Our ambition is clear. Antioch College is quickly on its way to becoming a center for experimentation in new models of learning, teaching and student support. At the center of this new wave of innovation is the ReinventED Lab + Incubator. Our goals for it are dynamic: + Make students active participants in their own educations. Through the Lab, students will be involved in creating new courses and experience-based approaches that help them apply their academic learning to solve today s most pressing challenges. + Attract groundbreaking collaborators and promote cross-fertilization. The Lab will invite diverse change-agents from around the world to contribute to programming. This gives students and faculty the opportunity to engage with perspectives outside of academia to develop real-world solutions. + Respond quickly to America s current educational needs. Fixing our colleges can t wait, nor are most academic institutions nimble enough to embrace the transformation that is desperately needed. At Antioch, we have the agility of a start-up and have focused our systems to stay in touch with the world. + Develop systems that will better serve a new generation of students. We will focus on critical elements for student success, including summer bridge programs, first year classes and overall experience, transition/orientation programs, and advising. + Share scalable models for adoption at colleges across the country. The challenges we re facing in higher education can t be solved on a single campus. An effort this large requires educational innovation on a national scale to generate impact that we can measure within the next decade. We believe incubation can start here at Antioch. 8

Our vision requires partners. To fulfill our ambitions for ReinventED Lab + Incubator, we are currently seeking to connect with strategic partners, build networks of support, and raise seed funding for the following necessities: + Student scholarships to support first-generation and low-income students + Incentives for visiting entrepreneurs and educators + Full-time staff for operations, outreach, program design and evaluation + Dedicated lab space With the right support, we will be ready to lead the transformation of our nation s colleges into active hubs of inquiry and skill-building for a new student population. 9

NOW & TOMORROW Sustainable Finances & Operations We re restarting Antioch at a moment when it s abundantly clear that the way Americans live is not sustainable environmentally or financially. As a nation, we re overtaxing energy resources and fighting to keep public schools afloat. Tuition continues to skyrocket, making it nearly impossible for working and middle-class students to attend college, let alone survive college debt. We cannot afford business as usual any longer. As a college start-up, we re willing and able to adopt innovative new business practices that allow us to maximize our resources, so that we can invest in an affordable first-rate education. 10

Numbers that last. When we reopened the college to students in 2011, the campus had suffered decades of deferred maintenance and neglect. Faced with the need to rebuild our physical plant, we saw an opportunity to link pedagogy with action and invest in a high-performance campus for long-term savings. 90% renewable. By 2018, Antioch College will be among the first liberal arts colleges in America to be almost entirely powered by clean energy sources. + Fall 2014, we broke ground on a 5-acre solar farm. It will completely offset the electrical consumption of our central geothermal plant. + Our 345-ton geothermal plant is projected to offset 2900 tons of CO2 + $500,000 in maintenance and energy costs each year. + We ll save more than $15 million over the 30-year life span of both facilities. 360 approach. Our no-frills master plan maximizes space utilization and ensures all renovations and construction will be built to LEED standards and consistent with enrollment growth. + LEED Gold certification was awarded to Historic North Hall, now the second-oldest building in the U.S. with such distinction. + 28% of food served on campus is provided by the Antioch Farm. Although still in its infancy, we have one of the most robust field-to-fork programs in the state of Ohio. A 35-acre lab, our farm provides students with firsthand work experience and myriad learning opportunities. 11

Community = Opportunity Reflecting on our campus master plan, we realized that the living capacity of our 100 acres extends well beyond our projected student population of 1,000. And we have abundant assets that we integrate with our curriculum and the town of Yellow Springs: a working farm and radio station, 1,000-acre nature preserve and equestrian center, and recently renovated state-of-the-art theater and wellness facilities. We began envisioning ways to maximize this wealth of space and resources beyond their current uses, while promoting new opportunities for our students to engage with the world. What if Antioch College diversified its campus and operations to: + Provide affordable green housing and amenities in a region with a real estate shortage? + Offer communal living options and rich cultural programming for active retired adults? + Open our assets to the citizens of Yellow Springs to create symbiotic new business models? + Spark intimate learning and teaching opportunities among a diverse, multi-generational community? + Test new models for sustainable living and urban planning? A feasibility study determined that there s not only a market for this new community, but it also makes sound financial sense. With the participation of a more diverse consumer base, Antioch will have the means to make a liberal arts education affordable for all students. 12

RECORD OF PERFORMANCE The Current State of Antioch College Antioch College has an educational tradition and social legacy dating back to 1850. But we operate with a start-up mentality that has guided our rebirth and now fuels the acceleration of our new college mandate. It signals yet another pioneering chapter in the storied history of Antioch College. Today we are far more entrepreneurial than we are institutional and it shows in how we re going about the business of rethinking liberal arts education in America. 13

A conservative approach. The term conservative is not one that is often associated with Antioch College. But from a financial point of view, it is how we ve been able to kick-start a new Antioch a leaner operation focused on the fundamentals of an experiential education. As a new college, it was necessary to reopen with a temporary period of guaranteed tuition. But this measure has instilled a disciplined management strategy that will endure. Significant planning has already paid dividends in just three short years, including: + Budget surpluses. The past two annual operating budgets have revealed budget surpluses for the College without the benefit of paid student tuition. In both cases, these modest surpluses have been thoughtfully reinvested to address some of our most pressing infrastructure needs, including renovating educational and student housing facilities. + Campus renovations. We don t fund athletic teams, build stadiums or outfit students with indulgent accommodations. Instead, we re strategically investing in practical campus facilities that are comfortable, meet LEED standards, and demonstrate our commitment to engage our students with the world, not offer a retreat from it. 14

+ Accreditation and federal grants. Antioch is on track to achieve full accreditation as early as June 2016 two years ahead of schedule. Our new status as a candidate for accreditation means access to federal student aid in 2015, which will offset a significant amount of tuition costs. + Incremental growth model. Even with the onset of paid tuition and federal grant money, we re capping annual enrollment at 70 80 students until 2016. This allows us to delay the need for a third residence hall and additional faculty and staff. + A strategic business plan. Our commitment to restructuring higher education will not come at the expense of our operational needs. We know what it will take to sustain a vibrant Antioch. By 2021, more than a third of our operational and capital needs will be met through student-derived revenue and income from auxiliary programs. But it also means we will be tasked with raising the other two-thirds over the next eight years. This will require pragmatism and strong stewardship. And it will require the participation of key partners to help us realize the full potential of our vision. A new formula is required. We have proven that our discipline is strong, our approach is viable, and our potential to disrupt and fundamentally change higher education for the better is within reach. What s more, Antioch s unprecedented comeback is an emerging success story almost completely funded and fueled by the passion and unwavering loyalty of a small alumni base dedicated to big ideas. Without question, they are the angel investors in our start-up story. As we continue to seek sustainability in all things Antioch, we know this: our current funding model is unsustainable. Alumni alone cannot feed our operations and seed our innovation. Now is the time for us to accelerate by inspiring and partnering with others who embrace our vision and agree that college today is broken. The good news is that we have an unprecedented opportunity to fix it together. 15

OUR LEADER An Agent of Social Change Dr. Thomas Manley President Antioch College 16

Change happens when individuals mobilize to identify and solve problems. Transformational leadership facilitates that mobilization. Dr. Thomas Manley has served as president of Antioch College since March 1, 2016. He has more than 35 years of experience helping individuals and organizations unleash their intellectual and creative powers through education. Manley is a collaborative and innovative leader with a demonstrated record of building organizational capacity, inclusiveness, diversity and the practice of shared governance. He advocates resilience-based thinking/planning and is a believer in the power of human creativity and intercultural learning to shift thinking and behavior on a global, organizational and individual basis. A former president (2003-2015) of Pacific Northwest College of Art (PNCA), Manley is credited for a turnaround that cemented PNCA s position as Portland s most well-rounded, diverse and most established arts institution. Among his milestones at PNCA are a successful brick-and-mortar expansion, and cultivation of the largest gift to an arts organization in Oregon s history. Before becoming president of PNCA in 2003, Manley spent 22 years at the Claremont Colleges, mainly at Pitzer College, where he held a variety of administrative posts and served as a member of the 17

faculty. He was instrumental in developing Pitzer s nationally prominent study abroad program, including sites in China, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Italy, Japan, Nepal, Turkey, Venezuela, Wales and South Africa. A specialist on Japan, he served as a scholar in residence at a women s college outside of Osaka, and later helped to write the curriculum for an American-style liberal arts college, the first of its kind to be accredited by the Japanese Ministry of Education. In addition to his study of Japan, Manley has written and presented on a variety of subjects related to international, intercultural and language education. He has also developed a number of cross-cultural and language learning innovations, including a highly praised portfolio journal system, known as the Fieldbook. Manley is a native of Baltimore, Md., where he received a Bachelor of Science degree in East Asian history and education from Towson University. He earned a Master s degree in Asian studies and a Doctorate in Education from the Claremont Graduate University in Claremont, Calif. He has a long history of board and volunteer service to organizations such as the Association of Independent Colleges of Art and Design (AICAD), Ford Family Foundation s visual arts initiative, National Endowment of the Arts Education Leadership Initiative, and the Oregon Alliance of Independent Colleges and Universities. A student of poetry and a lover of food, Manley is married to Susanne Hashim and they have a young daughter, Chedin. Tom also has a son, Dashiell; a stepdaughter, Karina; and a stepson, Johan. Manley and his family reside in Folkmanis House on Antioch College s historic campus in Yellow Springs, Ohio. 18

ENGAGE ANTIOCH Connect with Tom Dr. Thomas Manley President office: 246 McGregor Hall phone: 937-319-6173 e-mail: tmanley@antiochcollege.org Nancy Wuebben Executive Assistant Office of the President and Board of Trustees office: 200 McGregor Hall phone: 937-319-6164 e-mail: nwuebben@antiochcollege.org Antioch College (main office) address: One Morgan Place Yellow Springs, Ohio 45387 19

ABOUT Antioch College 20 Antioch College is a 166 year-old start-up, determined to use its reopening to build and scale a model for what the liberal arts experience can be for all students in the 21st century not a 4-year retreat from the world, but a deeper engagement with it. Originally founded in 1850, Antioch has long been an agent of disruptive change, having been the only liberal arts college in the country with a required work component for more than 100 years. The Cooperative Education program reflects Antioch s critical pedagogical insight that the separation of classroom learning from the world of work is artificial a philosophy that has produced Nobel Laureates, Fulbright and Rhodes scholars, and notables in the arts, government, business and education. The College, located in Yellow Springs, Ohio, is a Candidate for Accreditation with the Higher Learning Commission. Learn more at www.antiochcollege.org.

21

22 naa-1114