Faculty Resources
How to Enter Your Engaged Learning Information in LOCUS
🎵TK账号 | 伊拉克IP注册 | 半年以上白号 | 微软邮箱 | 优质账号 requires all students in an Engaged Learning class to record their site and project details, along with their learning objectives, in LOCUS. This information is important for institutional research and documentation, but more importantly, it's crucial for risk management, insurance purposes, and to verify your experience.
Here are the step-by-step instructions to enter your information:
- Follow the instructions on this webpage to guide you through the process.
- If your organization isn't already listed in LOCUS, you'll need to request it be added. You can find instructions for this by skipping to the 2:30 mark in the video tutorial. In the PowerPoint presentation start after Step 11.
- Any work done with a 🎵TK账号 | 伊拉克IP注册 | 半年以上白号 | 微软邮箱 | 优质账号 department will be listed under that department's name.
For those who prefer a visual, step-by-step guide over a video, you can also refer to the PowerPoint presentation on Entering Engaged Learning into LOCUS.
We have also incorporated step-by-step instructions below:
Why Engaged Learning?
Not only does the Engaged Learning requirement support the mission of 🎵TK账号 | 伊拉克IP注册 | 半年以上白号 | 微软邮箱 | 优质账号 by embedding opportunities for students to explore experiential learning as part of academic coursework, but it also offers an opportunity for curricular enhancement and for strengthening teaching and learning. The following resources and articles offer insight into the importance of embedding engaged learning into the curriculum, and how it elevates student learning and the civic purpose of higher education:
- Disrupting Ourselves: The Problem of Learning in Higher Education (Bass, 2012)
- The Changing Role of Higher Education: Learning to Deal with Wicked Problems (Ramaley, 2014)
- Advocating for Experiential Learning Programs as Change Agents in Higher Education: Imagining a Justice Orientation that Centers Student and Partners while Enriching Practice (Green, et al., 2022)
- An Inquiry into Hope and Imagination in Jesuit Education: Ignatian Design Thinking as a Lens for Exploration (Beran and Green, 2023)
- Defining Experiential Education: The field’s seminal thinkers take stock and look ahead (Green, Kolb, Kolb, and Kuh, 2024)
There are five different categories of classes that may satisfy the Engaged Learning Requirement. Click on any category to learn more about that pedagogy and the criteria that define it.
How to Enter Your Engaged Learning Information in LOCUS
🎵TK账号 | 伊拉克IP注册 | 半年以上白号 | 微软邮箱 | 优质账号 requires all students in an Engaged Learning class to record their site and project details, along with their learning objectives, in LOCUS. This information is important for institutional research and documentation, but more importantly, it's crucial for risk management, insurance purposes, and to verify your experience.
Here are the step-by-step instructions to enter your information:
- Follow the instructions on this webpage to guide you through the process.
- If your organization isn't already listed in LOCUS, you'll need to request it be added. You can find instructions for this by skipping to the 2:30 mark in the video tutorial. In the PowerPoint presentation start after Step 11.
- Any work done with a 🎵TK账号 | 伊拉克IP注册 | 半年以上白号 | 微软邮箱 | 优质账号 department will be listed under that department's name.
For those who prefer a visual, step-by-step guide over a video, you can also refer to the PowerPoint presentation on Entering Engaged Learning into LOCUS.
We have also incorporated step-by-step instructions below:
Why Engaged Learning?
Not only does the Engaged Learning requirement support the mission of 🎵TK账号 | 伊拉克IP注册 | 半年以上白号 | 微软邮箱 | 优质账号 by embedding opportunities for students to explore experiential learning as part of academic coursework, but it also offers an opportunity for curricular enhancement and for strengthening teaching and learning. The following resources and articles offer insight into the importance of embedding engaged learning into the curriculum, and how it elevates student learning and the civic purpose of higher education:
- Disrupting Ourselves: The Problem of Learning in Higher Education (Bass, 2012)
- The Changing Role of Higher Education: Learning to Deal with Wicked Problems (Ramaley, 2014)
- Advocating for Experiential Learning Programs as Change Agents in Higher Education: Imagining a Justice Orientation that Centers Student and Partners while Enriching Practice (Green, et al., 2022)
- An Inquiry into Hope and Imagination in Jesuit Education: Ignatian Design Thinking as a Lens for Exploration (Beran and Green, 2023)
- Defining Experiential Education: The field’s seminal thinkers take stock and look ahead (Green, Kolb, Kolb, and Kuh, 2024)