Difference between revisions of "Priorities:William Jewell College Strategic Priorities"
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<div>Communicating between areas of study and departments for the purpose of collaboration will benefit the community by expanding the effects of the liberal arts approach at William Jewell College. Inviting faculty from other departments to lectures, shadow a class, collaborate on curriculum, and share ideas are the objectives of interdepartmental communication. For example, if a class is discussing a subject that relates to that of another discipline, it could be enriching to bring a faculty member from the other department to speak on the subject. Furthermore, if a department had a program that could be of interest to a student outside the major, faculty to faculty communication could facilitate communicating this program to their students.</div><div><br/></div> | <div>Communicating between areas of study and departments for the purpose of collaboration will benefit the community by expanding the effects of the liberal arts approach at William Jewell College. Inviting faculty from other departments to lectures, shadow a class, collaborate on curriculum, and share ideas are the objectives of interdepartmental communication. For example, if a class is discussing a subject that relates to that of another discipline, it could be enriching to bring a faculty member from the other department to speak on the subject. Furthermore, if a department had a program that could be of interest to a student outside the major, faculty to faculty communication could facilitate communicating this program to their students.</div><div><br/></div> | ||
== Tactic 3: Unifying Silos<br/> == | == Tactic 3: Unifying Silos<br/> == | ||
| − | <div>As students have expressed, they feel comfortable communicating with faculty in their own discipline, but are hesitant to contact those who are not in their disciple. Breaking down silos that block communication could aid in encouraging students talking to faculty in other disciplines. As William Jewell is a liberal arts institution, it is a goal of the college to create well rounded individuals who value critical thinking. This goal can be facilitated through accessibility to the whole faculty, not just those in one's department.</div><div>< | + | <div>As students have expressed, they feel comfortable communicating with faculty in their own discipline, but are hesitant to contact those who are not in their disciple. Breaking down silos that block communication could aid in encouraging students talking to faculty in other disciplines. As William Jewell is a liberal arts institution, it is a goal of the college to create well rounded individuals who value critical thinking. This goal can be facilitated through accessibility to the whole faculty, not just those in one's department.</div> |
| − | + | = Priority 5: Prospective Student Outreach = | |
| + | <div>Currently William Jewell Admissions have not made entrepreneurship and innovation a key aspect to market about Jewell when reaching out to students. This is very much related to our marketing initiative. The goal of this initiative would be for our Leadership Circle to build a relationship with Admissions in order to develop different ways for admissions to share about all of Jewell's entrepreneurial resources and opportunities. This will be beneficial in that it will bring in more students who are driven by entrepreneurship and innovation at the same time as having all students coming into Jewell with the knowledge of opportunities and resources that may seem hidden to even current students from the start.</div> | ||
| + | == Tactic 1: Create a Relationship and Collect Information == | ||
| + | <div>The first step is to create a relationship with Admissions and collect information on specific information the Admissions Department current gives to prospective students through social media, mass marketing, website information, high school career fairs, campus visits, and brochures. Collaborating and building a relationship with Admissions means we will begin to collaborate with them on ideas of ways to get information out to prospective students.</div> | ||
| + | == Tactic 2: Idea Collaboration<br/> == | ||
| + | <div>The next step would be to collaborate closely with Admissions on ways we can get this information out. For example, we may decide social media is the best way to go, or possibly a brochure. We want to plan out what ways of communication we will use. On campus tours would be a great way to get the information out. If we added it into the tour, all students who visit would have the information; the student could also be given a brochure of the information as well as a link to a site on the Jewell page that talks about all of these opportunities and resources. These ideas will be created with Admissions fully involved so that we can make a significant impact.</div> | ||
| + | == Tactic 3: Project Execution == | ||
| + | <div>Lastly, these ideas would then need to be executed. Of course, after and during execution we will need to be evaluating how well the communication works. Hopefully, these projects created in tactic two would have a great impact on the knowledge Freshman have about student resources and opportunities in innovation and entrepreneurship. </div> | ||
= Related Resources = | = Related Resources = | ||
Revision as of 02:23, 28 September 2014
Contents
- 1 Strategic Priorities at William Jewell College
- 2 Priority 1: Promoting Student Voice & Events
- 3 Priority 2: Leveraging Research Internships & Industry Mentorship
- 4 Priority 3: Developing Innovative Curricular Endeavors
- 5 Priority 4: Interdisciplinary Communication
- 6 Priority 5: Prospective Student Outreach
- 7 Related Resources
Strategic Priorities at William Jewell College
Priority 1: Promoting Student Voice & Events
Paperless @ Jewell
Marketing to Advance Innovation and Entrepreneurship
Campus Data
Priority 2: Leveraging Research Internships & Industry Mentorship
William Jewell College students, researchers, and entrepreneurs struggle to gain industry experience with their academic projects and curriculum that would be necessary for long-term pursuits. Projects are used to benefit the students education in an academic setting but does not benefit the invested student in being more marketable for a future career. By accessing the distinguished alumni, local business owners, and professionals of all trade to help guide these academic projects would help students develop professional relationship, a future mentor, and skills for the industry.
Taking Initiative
To guide a better mentor and internship program for student to excel their research experience a preliminary study needs to be conducted to assess how many students are participating in research. The hardest part of starting this initiative will be finding enough people in the industry to accept this task of advising students through research or projects.
Students who want to gain a stronger set of skills for working in the industry would talk to their department faculty about doing research through a business or mentor program. The research project itself can be determined through the faculty and student; or it can be discussed between the student and mentor to decide how their research can best play into their future in the industry to formulate what the project should be. Preferrably, the project would end up being very similar or exactly like an internship but with integrated reserach.
These types of research internship and industrial mentorships would provide students with a greater netowrk of how their education and studies will benefit in a future career path. Ultimately, this would prepare the student, researcher, and future entrepreneur with a more broad understanding of how their knowledge is used to innovate in an industry that is constantly changing for new ways and ideas.
Difference
A research internship would be similar but not exactly like any other type of research or internship. By combining the two aspects of research and an internship, there is a level of learning to adapt previous knowledge with constant change of a competitive industry. Students will learn to be more innovative to succeed in this competitive atmosphere. This type of learning is something that can not be replicated in the academic reserach facility. The mentoring business will benefit from acquiring the student's research for innovative thinking and problem solving.
Priority 3: Developing Innovative Curricular Endeavors
William Jewell College Students and Faculty have had difficulty starting large-scale projects with longevity and a diverse set of smaller interdisciplinary avenues/projects due to the lack of student and faculty body support. Students face barriers of hard-to-inspire colleagues and professors that have begun accepting the status quo. Students, Faculty, and staff have succumbed to excessive risk aversion. Facilitating the creation of large scale projects that utilize the resources of the local community and the forged relationships between students and faculty will invigorate the innovative and entrepreneurial spirit and results of the College.
More specifically, the curriculum at Jewell is lacking interdisciplinary projects in all majors. Jewell should launch broad projects, with smaller projects intertwined that students can complete over their four year college career. These said projects would give students experience that would have a quantifiable solution to use to market themselves as they enter the job world in the future. This solution would not only benefit the student but also the beneficiaries of the project. For example if a broad project taken on by the college was to reduce poverty in Kansas City, then the small project would have to show a reduction in poverty on some quantitative level. A small project could be a psychology demographic research project of residents in Kansas City living in poverty. Finally, the college and faculty would benefit from a curriculum change such as this. Even as it would be more work, for faculty it would allow the college to be able to have marketing solutions and have a more concrete way of showing successful community outreach.
Task 1: Collecting Initial Data
The first task is to complete research and map the demographics and plausibility of this proposal. As we talk to more faculty and students, we will learn more potential problems. Therefore the first task will be a base survey to collect and sort aggregate data as to the amount of support both from the college and for the surrounding community.
Task 2: Developing Policy
Drafting a white page document that will serve as a formal proposal is the most important process. During this drafting process we will use expert insight into legal and contractual requirements. Eventually this document will be overhauled by student, faculty, and community leader committees before submitting the document to administration of the college.
Task 3: Launching Initiative
Once support has been mapped, the next goal is start the marketing process. This will be done through social media, and campus engagement at first. Then later we will have a launch day where funding will be used to incentivize attendance and a website for the initiative will also be launched on this launch day.
Priority 4: Interdisciplinary Communication
Tactic 1: Building Relationships
Tactic 2: Pitching Interdisciplinary Ideas
Tactic 3: Unifying Silos
Priority 5: Prospective Student Outreach
Tactic 1: Create a Relationship and Collect Information
Tactic 2: Idea Collaboration
Tactic 3: Project Execution
Related Resources
2014-2015 Leadership Circle: Bradley Dice, James Milam, Kate McFerren, Amelia Hanzlick, Conner Hazelrigg