Call & Times

Hands-on learning doesn’t teach everything

- By JEFFREY SELINGO Special To The Washington Post Selingo is the author of about how today’s graduates launch into their careers.

As college students nationwide work in part-time jobs or internship­s this summer, it’s unlikely many will think about how they’re using their undergradu­ate courses on the job or how they might apply what they’re learning at work when they get back to campus.

For students, college is a series of disconnect­ed experience­s – the classroom, the dorm, the athletic field, the internship. Yet what employers tell me gets college students hired is the ability to translate what they learned in one place (the classroom, for instance) to another that is far different from where they originally learned a concept (a project on an internship).

Educators call this “transfer learning” – the ability to generalize core principles and apply them in many different places, which becomes more important as the skills needed to keep up in any job and occupation continue to shift in the future.

The concept sounds simple enough. But today’s students, facing the constant pressure to prepare for standardiz­ed tests, rarely have the chance to learn through problem solving or to be involved in projects that reinforce skills that can be used in multiple settings. Our ability to drive almost any car on the market without reading its manual is an example of knowledge transfer, as is our ability to solve math equations involving any number once we learn the formula.

Knowledge transfer is what gets students hired, because it’s the ability to show in job interviews what they cannot easily display on their résumé or in an applicatio­n. “The workers who are in highest demand are those who can think across complex systems,” Joseph Aoun, the president of Northeaste­rn University, told me last week at a conference about the impact of artificial intelligen­ce on higher education.

In response to demands from students, parents and employers, colleges and universiti­es are adding hands-on experience­s to the undergradu­ate curriculum.

Arizona State University, where I’m a professor of practice, is testing a curriculum across a dozen majors in which students learn nearly half of the subject matter through group projects instead of a specified schedule of classes. Engineerin­g students might build a robot and learn the key principles of mechanics and electronic­s from faculty members during the project. The hope is that students will be more engaged if theories from the classroom are immediatel­y applied in the outside world instead of years after students graduate.

That’s the same approach encouraged by co-ops, offered by a handful of colleges in the United States, including Northeaste­rn. Although they are often conflated in the minds of students and parents, co-ops are not internship­s. While internship­s are an add-on to a degree, co-ops are part and parcel of the undergradu­ate experience, making up from one-third to almost of the time a student spends in school.

The problem with the hands-on learning experience­s being added by colleges to the undergradu­ate curriculum? They’re often not accompanie­d by the guidance that students need to help them transfer what they learn. So students become adept in job interviews at describing what they did during a co-op or a project, but have difficulty talking about what they actually learned and how they can apply that to where they want to work.

College students find the concept of transfer learning particular­ly difficult to grasp because for most of their schooling, their learning was directed by someone else – parents and teachers – who spelled out how to transfer knowledge between disparate ideas. Learning in the workplace, however, is mostly self-directed.

That’s why Northeaste­rn created a program to help its co-op students take an inventory of their learning throughout the undergradu­ate curriculum. Beginning just before freshman year, the program, called SAIL (Self-Authored Integrated Learning), provides a technology platform for students to align their learning experience­s across school and work. It breaks the experience­s into five pillars: intellectu­al, civic, wellness, global and profession­al. By tracking their progress, students can visualize what they have done in all five areas and where they have grown, which could provide useful informatio­n for them during a job interview

Teaching students how to transfer their knowledge has a side benefit on campuses, too. It helps faculty see extracurri­cular experience­s as part of the academic fabric of the institutio­n, rather than just something that happens outside the classroom. When you ask college graduates what they most value about their undergradu­ate career, they often rate extracurri­cular experience­s the highest. But those experience­s don’t count toward their degree.

If colleges simply add hands-on learning opportunit­ies for students without assisting them in transferri­ng what they learn to life after school, it’s like they never provided those experience­s in the first place.

After College, There Is Life

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