
91Âț». Amanda Tucker, professor of English and director of General Education at the University of Wisconsin-Platteville, and 91Âț». Katie Kalish, professor of English at UW-Platteville Baraboo Sauk County, and director of First-Year Writing, were awarded a planning grant from the Teagle Foundation and National Endowment for the Humanities to develop an integrated liberal arts certificate. The role of the grant is to revitalize humanities and to expose students to different areas of liberal arts by creating purposeful pathways of study within the general education program. The first version of the certificate will go through faculty governance this month, with the hope of it becoming a program students can opt into in the fall of 2022.
âWe are really excited,â said Tucker. âThe things we can do through this grant provide such a great learning opportunity for students both on the main campus and the branch campuses.â
âThe grant will also serve general education, which for the branch campuses is important because itâs the bread and butter of what we do,â added Kalish. âThis is a credential that can be embedded into the path students are already on. It doesnât add any time to their degree. Itâs a way of taking classes that are purposeful and will feel intentional.â
An integrated liberal arts certificate consists of two components. The first, according to Tucker, a gateway course that students would take in their freshman year, followed by a series of courses in a thematic cluster. Currently, Tucker and Kalish envision the gateway course to be College Writing, with it opening to other first year classes in the future.
âIn that gateway course, students get to work in what the grant and Teagle Foundation call âtransformative texts,ââ said Tucker. âThe texts ask students to grapple with challenges that are part of the human experience. In that type of course, there are a lot of community and relationship building. Itâs helpful because the first year is a hard transition for a lot of students.â
Kalish notes how the grant creates a framework where students would have the experience of taking linked courses while making progress towards earning their certificate and degree â a benefit for those still discovering their areas of interest.
âA lot of students at the branch campuses are still figuring out their path and may have an interest in a thematic cluster. Some of our students might be looking at getting an associate degree,â said Kalish. âI love the transformative text format aspect of it. Itâs an engaging course sequence. The gateway classes and the clusters are interesting and are going to connect things and help students see, understand and interact in the world in a richer way.â
As of now, the certificate program would offer two thematic clusters: environment and sustainability, and law and conflict resolution.
âOver the next couple years, our intention is to add more options for students in terms of the thematic clusters,â said Tucker. âIn order for that to happen there will need to be course development in different areas.â
Tucker and Kalish are looking forward to seeing the integrated liberal arts certificate unfold. They acknowledge how the program would reach a large number of students and make the studentsâ experience in general education even more meaningful. Theyâre also appreciative of all their colleagues who have taken part in the planning grant project.
âAmanda and I have been fortunate to be working with wonderful people from across all three campuses,â said Kalish. âWe have been working with folks from biology, philosophy, womenâs studies, political science and civil engineering. We took the lead on writing the grant, but this is an effort created, built and conceptualized by the faculty across the three campuses, and because of that, itâs a rich and interesting program.â