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M.
Scott Momaday spoke at San Diego City College to commemorate
a year long series of events sponsored by the Fund for the
Humanities. Momaday, a Kiowa Indian, has written many Indian
folk tales and has won the Pulitzer Prize for his collection,
House Made of Dawn. He is also an artist and his
art work was exhibited last year at the Wheelwright Museum
of the American Indian in Santa Fe. When I took his literature
seminar at UCSB, we read The Way to Rainy Mountain,
which documents his pilgrimage reenacting the Kiowa's migration
from Montana and Wyoming to the Southwest. In it, he describes
with great power, the land and the American Indian's special
relationship to the land. So, it wasn't surprising when
Momaday spoke in San Diego on the topic, "A Sense of
Place. " When he began his talk, he shared a personal
anecdote. To honor him, for his accomplishments as an under
represented person in the Hall of Accomplishments, a well
meaning organization had just awarded him "The Ellis
Island" award. The irony of such an award - and the
accompanying offer to use the organization's computing network
and data retrieval service to determine when his ancestors
first arrived on the continental United States - was not
lost in Momaday. It was from this strong sense of place,
of belonging here, that this American Indian spoke.
After about 25 years of reading, writing,
and thinking about learning centers, I believe it is a sense
of place that's key to the definition of Learning Assistance
Centers. When Frank Christ defined Learning Assistance Centers,
he began his definition by saying first that the LAC was
"a place. " (Christ, 197 1). When I borrowed Christ's
definition in order to have a yardstick for tracing the
origins of the Learning Assistance Center in 1975, 1 wrote
that the LAC was "a place concerned with learning within
and without, functioning primarily to enable students to
learn more in less time with greater ease and confidence;
offering tutorial help, study aids in the content areas
and referrals to other helping agencies; serving as a testing
ground for innovative machines, materials, and programs
(Christ, p. 35) and acting as campus ombudsman. (Kersteins,
p. 39.)" Thus, I think the territory or real estate
itself is central to the Learning Assistance Center concept.
It is the place and its ecology that distinguishes the Learning
Assistance Center from the isolated reading improvement
class, the study skills seminar, the sununer orientation,
and the tutorial session.
Much has been written about the learning
center client, the non traditional student. Troyka (1982)
called the 1980s the decade of the Nontraditional Student
and described the nontraditional student as one who is older,
a first generation college attendee, single or married with
children, a returning woman, foreign born, and/or a full
time employee: "They work on construction crews, in
restaurants, as practical nurses, on the police force; some
are on welfare. Many nontraditional students barely finished
high school and thus [40] were graduated without strong
literacy skills. Some never finished high school and have
been admitted to college on waivers. Others dropped out
of high school but later decided to earn an equivalency
diploma, a credential more difficult to acquire than a regular
diploma" (p. 253). She continues, "Nontraditional
students come to academe with resources not usually used
or even recognized in college. " A decade earlier,
in Beyond the Open Door, Pat Cross (1971) described
the nontraditional student's background as both financially
and educationally ilinpoverished. Nontraditional students
have been described by Cross, Maxwell, Roueche and Snow,
Mink, Rotter and others as having external locus of control
and being field dependent - characteristics associated with
poor academic performance. The nontraditional student is
accustomed to academic failure. In Error and Expectations
(1977), Mina Shaughnessy sunnnarized the predicament
of the student caught in the catch 22 of a typical composition
assignment. The student must explain something to someone
who already knows it, so the student can find out what he
or she said wrong: "...academic writing is a trap,
not a way of saying something to someone. The spoken language,
looping back and forth between speakers, offering chances
for groping and backing up and even hiding, leaving room
for the language of hands and face, of pitch and pauses,
is generous and inviting. Next to this rich orchestration,
writing is but a line that moves haltingly across the page,
exposing as it goes all that the writer doesn't know, than
passing into the hands of a stranger who reads it with a
lawyer's eyes, searching for flaws" (Shaughnessy, p.
7). Mike Rose, in his autobiographical book, Lives on
the Boundary (1989), may have described the nontraditional
student most poignantly; the student is not at home in the
academy. Without learning skills, knowledge of academic
discourse, or academic etiquette, he or she feels on alien
ground; the college or university is not his or her place
and many faculty would agree that this student does not
belong in their classes or on their campus.
Where can this student go? Obviously, he
can leave, having given the college experience a try. Astin
and his associates have established through their research
and Rose demonstrates through his anecdotes that students
might stay in college if they can affiliate with a campus
organization or club, a campus job, or a professor. In a
1992 article in Research in Developmental Education,
Suelia McCrimmon cites Vincent Tinto (1987, p. 184), "persistence
arises from the social and intellectual rewards accruing
to competent membership in the communities of the college
and from the impact that membership has upon individual
goals and commitments. " This connection to the institution
bolsters retention. The learning center is the nontraditional
students place. Here, he or she finds scholastic and affective
support, a chair or sofa, and sometimes a cup of coffee.
Are all centers the same? Depending on the
local origin of the Center, the campus politics and the
tastes of the Center director, Centers will have a wide
range of names. The number of these amusing titles have
been documented elsewhere. But the two fundamentally distinct
centers are the Learning Assistance Center and the Learning
Resources Center. In a 1980 article included in the Jossey-Bass
New Directions for College Learning Assistance, Enright
and Kerstiens summarize the philosophical distinction. They
write that the LAC is directed to helping students become
successful learners while assuming modes of instruction
will remain relatively constant. On the other hand,
the LRC is dedicated to provided innovative instructional
delivery systems in order to better accommodate nontraditional
students. These two directions for trying to effect a better
match between the nontraditional student and the established
curriculum of the institution results in other differences.
While the learning Assistance Center Director is more likely
to report to a Dean of Counseling or Student Services, the
Learning Resources Center Director probably reports to the
Dean of Library Services. While one is housed in the student
services, the other is located in the library. One is more
likely to emphasize hardware, while the other is more likely
to emphasize human ware. Workshops on time management can
be found in or sponsored by the LAC; newly developed courseware
offering students practice on needed math competencies can
be found in the Learning Resource Center. Roughly - and
perhaps unfairly - a LRC professional talks about things
and an LAC professional talks about services. Typically
neither offers credit classes or has departmental status.
One characteristic both centers share (theoretically) is
both are frequented by learners of all skill levels.
In 1975, two colleagues and I conducted a
survey of all higher educational institutions in the United
States (Devirian, Enright and Smith). We were interested
in where and what we called "program-centers"
were administratively and how extensively they had taken
root. We found Learning Assistance Centers, located organizationally
under student services and established on four year campuses.
We found, at that time, four year campuses had fewer program/centers
than two year institutions and that the program/centers
on two year campuses were likely to have originated not
in counseling centers like the LAC or in libraries like
the LRC, but in Academic Departments. The Center was often
called something like the Study Skills Center and it may
have originated in the Psychology, Reading or English Department.
The program/center might have been updated from the Reading
Laboratory or the Writing Center. For example, on my campus,
we now have a Writing, Critical Thinking, and English as
A Second Language Center under the auspices of the English
Department. These program/centers found in nearly all two
year colleges tended to offer classes, often for credit.
Since our survey, support services for nontraditional students
have been found to be more equally distributed across two
and four year institutions and, of course, the program/center
names have undergone cross fertilization. But, the constant
remains that the center is a place where nontraditional
students are welcome. The extent to which the students feel
they belong in the Center depends usually on factors like
the personality and the philosophy of the director, the
involvement of peer tutors and counselors, the procedures
and the layout of the center itself.
Learning Assistance Centers and Learning
Resource Centers differ from Developmental
Education programs because Developmental Education programs
often lack location. Most philosophically compatible to
Learning Assistance Centers, the developmental education
movement is rooted in developmental theory and its concomitant
belief in personal and intellectual growth. McCrinnnon in
"A Foundation for Developmental Education: Three Approaches,"
(1992) maintains developmental education is based on the
humanism of Carl Rogers (1969) and Abraham Maslow (1967);
the developmental theory of Erickson (1963), Chichering
(1969) and Perry (1981); and the behaviorism
of Skinner (1954) and Mager (1967). Hunter Boylan has pointed
out that a comprehensive developmental education program
includes classes plus support adjuncts for those classes.
Thus tutoring or a lab might be part of the developmental
program, but the thrust of the program will be classes the
student takes to become more self actualized and a more
competent learner. In books like Overcoming Learning
Problems and A Modest Proposal: Students Can Learn,
John Roueche and his colleagues outline principles compatible
with developmental education: nontraditional students should
not be thrown into the regular baccalaureate level college
program without adequate preparation and should not take
a full course load while they are struggling to improve
their skills and to adapt to the college or university culture.
Consequently, developmental education programs, despite
their theoretical basis, often look like a series of interrelated
skills classes comprising a separate department or unit
administratively or curricularly isolated from the main
educational enterprise. If LRC people talk in terms of things,
and LAC people talk in terms of services, then developmental
educators talk in terms of classes.
The multiplicity of names and structures
of Learning Assistance Centers, Learning Resource Centers,
and Developmental Education programs can be confusing, especially
for someone new to the field of college reading and
learning. For example, as a component of the overall administrative
umbrella, Learning Resource Centers might offer short term
classes in orientation to the library or in computer literacy
while as a subordinate feature of the overall developmental
education program, the department might include a learning
skills center. In fact, Gary Peterson in his book, The
Learning Center: A Sphere for Nontraditional Approaches
to Education, conceptualizes the Learning Assistance
Center as one necessary component of the Learning Resources
Center - the component offering human help. Yet, elements
found in most centers or desired by most centers are pretty
consistent. Brinda Van (1992), listed features gleaned from
successful college Learning Assistance Programs. The most
important, according to Van, was systematic planning and
clear goals compatible with the institutional needs (p.
29). She also included the following variables: written
policies, procedures and goal statements indicating the
institution's commitment to nontraditional students; administrative
support; divisional or departmental status; a director and
staff who have volunteered to work with nontraditional students;
different instructional methodologies so students can work
at their own pace; support services aimed to help students
develop affective characteristics associated with student
success; assessment to place students in the correct course
level and finally evaluation which is both formative and
summative. Marsha Odom in a 1992 presentation to the Fifth
Annual Midwest Regional Reading and Study Skills Conference,
described elements of a learning center. Her presentation
was titled, "Incorporating New Technologies into an
Academic Assistance Center." She included a mission
statement, needs assessment, and literature review in formulating
her plan. Features already in place included tutoring, courses,
walk-in and referral services. Features on Odom's wish list
for the future center included short term basic skills classes
using interactive software; more uses for innovative technology;
improved referral systems designed with the counseling center;
supplementary activities to support courses like American
History, Economics and Accounting; faculty and staff development;
stronger campus relations and communications; improved data
management systems and beefed up evaluation reports. For
her doctoral dissertation, Elaine Bums did an extensive
analysis of components and their characteristics in two
year college learning assistance centers. From her analysis,
she proposed a model Learning Assistance Center, which will
be included in the 1992-93 Proceedings of the Annual
Winter Institute for Learning Assistance. The components
of the Learning Assistance Center model are testing, staff
training, developmental laboratories, such as the math lab,
reading lab, and writing lab; developmental courses; counseling;
advisement; study skills; computer assisted instruction;
multimedia delivery systems for learning; tutoring; on-going
publicity and public relations; printed instructional programs
and materials. Bums also includes supplemental instruction
in the model along with study skills appointments and workshops
and tutoring by appointment and/or drop in. When fleshed
out the Public Relations component includes orientations,
brochures, flyers, bookmarks, presentations, meetings, and
campus publications. In addition to describing the components
an idealized LAC should have, Bums also listed the attributes
those components should exemplify; she called these "characteristics."
They included individualized and self paced learning, learner
centered envirorunent, centralized resources, diagnostic
testing, perspective recommendations, administratively and
faculty supported, readily accessible to learners, visible
to the campus community, effective interrelationships with
other programs, departments, services on campus, cybernetic,
and open to all students. Of these thirteen characteristics,
nine focus on the nature of the Learning Assistance Center
as a place for students - especially the characteristic
of " learner-centered environment."
In 1978, Sullivan published the results of
a national survey of learning centers in A Guide, to
Higher Education Learning Centers in the United States and
Canada. Components he included in his
definition were instructional resources, instructional media,
learning skill development, tutoring and instructional development,
(p. 104). In the first edition of Improving Student Learning
Skills (1979), Martha Maxwell explains the learning
center: "learning centers assist students in basic
skills and learning beyond the assistance that faculty members
have time for during their class sessions and office hours.
" She goes on to explain, "Many learning centers
offer students such multiple services as individual and
group skills programs, tutoring, preparation for graduate
and professional exams, media and materials for self paced
instruction. Some concentrate their programs on special
groups such as student athletes, the disadvantaged, or international
students; others serve all students. Some offer credit for
reading and other skill courses; others do not. Whatever
the local title, learning centers are found in public and
private colleges, two and four year institutions, universities,
and graduate and professional schools" (p. 105). In
her guidebook, Maxwell also lists components of effective
learning centers. First is institutional commitment, which
means adequate resources, program acceptance by the campus
community, institutionalization so services are available
to all students and a central location in a spacious and
attractive facility. She also lists systematic data collection
and evaluation; flexible scheduling and delivery systems;
attention to staff/client compatibility and case load; and
clear entrance and exit criteria. Staff should be trained,
evaluated and resemble the ethnic proportions of the Center's
clients. Materials should reflect student needs and faculty
expectations. Finally, faculty acceptance and close working
relations with faculty are crucial to the program's success.
Thus, there are many components of learning centers; they
offer students diagnostic and mastery testing as well [44]
as test preparation. They offer content area and learning
skills tutoring by appointment and by drop in, one on one
and in small groups. They offer single concept and basic
skills classes, workshops, presentations and handouts. They
provide academic, career and sometimes personal counseling.
They offer information and self instruction in a variety
of multi-media and computer fonnats. Through a variety of
delivery systems, learning centers offer adjunct and supplemental
instruction to augment in-class learning. In addition, learning
centers also include opportunities for staff and faculty
development, for innovative programs, material, and equipment,
for systematic management and communication systems and
on going evaluation. But primarily, they offer the nontraditional
student a sense of place. The importance of territory is
illustrated when veteran Learning Center directors, such
as Martha Maxwell, discuss where the learning center is
housed; "Given the choice, I would select the facilities
that are most conveniently located for students over a fancy
suite of offices on the fifth floor of an office building
on the periphery of the campus" (p. 133).
These LAC attributes were written about the
programs of the 1970s and 1980s. What about the Learning
Assistance Center and the Learning Resource Center of the
1990s? Programmed instruction has given way to collaborative
groups. Individualized drill has bowed out to testing in
which answers can be negotiated. Audio visual equipment
has been replaced by microcomputers. The need for flexible
space remains the same. In a quick review of articles in
ERIC RIDE, JCRL, and the Journal of Developmental
Education, I found several descriptions of and prescriptions
for successful programs. Most assumed the availability of
a flexible centrally located space. In her review of the
professional literature, Brinda Van (1992) cities, "Ample
facilities in a centralized location... communication with
other departments... individualized instruction... and a
highly visible facility for innovation and change"
as ingredients for success. Kathleen McDermott Hannafin
(1991) writes at risk students need to learn how to learn,
how to adapt to the university, and they also need support
in their content classes. She recommends using technology
to implement self study courses in laboratory setting. "Electronic
media offers portability, modularity, access, nonrecurring
costs, logistical superiority, instructional quality control,
automated management and optimization of facilities. "
She goes on to describe computer based math and learning
skills, mini lessons available to students at Florida State
University . In RIDE, Hunter Boylan and his colleagues published
"A Research Agenda for Developmental Education,"
which was based on a round table forum at the first National
Conference on Research in Developmental Education. In his
discussion of retention, Boylan cites the research of Boylan
and Bonham (1992) which establishes the positive relationship
between centralized programs and resources and both student
retention and GPA. A flexible facility allows for centralization
of programs and resources. Monica Wyatt (1992) traced the
history of reading programs, concluding college reading
programs were needed in the future to assist large numbers
of minorities or non Anglos succeed in college. Wyatt mentions
the failure of early developmental courses to retain open
admissions students and notes as one exception the Higher
Educational Opportunity Program (HEOP) in New York, which
assists students through diagnostic testing, critical thinking
and communications classes and learning centers (p. 18).
In January the 1994 issue of the Journal of Reading,
Jim Reynolds and Stuart Wemer propose more emphasis on individual
learner styles in college reading and study skills courses.
Justified by the diversity of students, this individually
tailored approach to the learning process as opposed to
the "one size fits all approach" can be best carried
out in the learr-ung center. Several authors reconnnend
interdisciplinary and integrated instruction for underprepared
students; application and transfer is crucial to the student's
goals. Again, I think it makes sense that these instructional
elements come together in a place. One current model calls
for team teaching augmented with small seminars for both
students and participating faculty. Obviously, this cooperative
learning model needs to happen in a learning center, not
outside the English Department office or in the halls of
the Biology or History Departments.
In Flippo and Caverly's monograph, Teaching
Reading and Study Strategies at the College Level
(1991), they share their struggle with the lack of uniformity
in program titles: "These programs have a variety of
labels, including college reading and study skills,college
reading improvement, learning strategies, special studies,
developmental or remedial instruction, basic skills instruction,
and compensatory education" (p. viii). They decided
to let their contributors use whatever program titles they
wanted. Frank Christ put together several learning center
definitions on Lindex; they all begin with establishing
territory:
"Learning Assistance Center is any place
where learners, learner data and learning facilitators
are interwoven into a sequential, cybernetic, individualized,
people oriented system to service all students (learners)
and faculty (learning facilitators) of any institution for
whom learning by its students is important" (Christ,
1971).
"Learning Assistance Center is a place
concerned with learning environment within and without,
functioning primarily to enable students to learn more in
less time with greater ease and confidence; offering tutorial
help, study aids in the content areas and referrals to other
helping agencies; serving as a testing ground for innovative
machines, materials, and acting as campus ombudsman..."
(Enright, 1975)
"A center (learning skills center) as
we use the term, is a special location where students
can come, or be sent, for special instruction not usually
included in 'regular' college classes. Centers can exist
within traditional departments - often though not always
English departments - or they can be entities unconnected
to other divisions of the college. They can offer individualized
instruction, special classes, tutoring, or something in
between" (McPherson, 1976).
And Christ includes a minimal definition:
"A Learning Assistance Center, as defined
minimalistically, is a space, 10' x 10', located
on a college campus with visibility and accessibility to
all students and teachers, that contains one desk or table,
two chairs, a file cabinet, a telephone, a trained
professional, a referral system, and information database
of all available campus and community programs, services,
personnel, and materials that can assist students and teachers
to improve learning efficiency and effectiveness. "
(Christ, 1988).
I predict that when non traditional students
find that minimal piece of real estate and call it their
own, that 10' x 10', space is going to get pretty crowded.
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