Peter Lepage to lead education, innovation at Arts and Sciences


Lepage

The College of Arts and Sciences has announced a new senior-level position to enhance and support its long-standing commitment to education innovation. Peter Lepage, professor of physics and former dean of the college, will serve as the college’s first director of education innovation.

“Peter is a real leader in educational excellence both within the college and nationally. He helped to initiate the Active Learning Initiative (ALI), and we are fortunate that he will be at the helm of the college’s ongoing efforts to expand our engaged learning strategies,” said Gretchen Ritter, the Harold Tanner Dean of Arts & Sciences. “We have fabulous faculty in the college and we look forward to finding new ways to enhance their success as educators both inside and outside the classroom.”

Lepage brings a long-standing interest in innovative pedagogy to his new position. He served as co-chair of the working group for the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology, which in 2012 produced the often-cited report, “Engage To Excel: Producing One Million Additional College Graduates with Degrees in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics.”

He currently serves on the Technical Advisory Committee for the Association of American Universities’ Undergraduate STEM Education Initiative, and is vice chair of the National Science Board’s Committee on Education and Human Resources.

The college’s engaged learning initiatives have strong alumni support. The ALI five-year pilot project, for example, is funded by Alex and Laura Hanson, both Class of 1987.

“We have many donors who are passionate about the well-being of students and excited about initiatives around student learning,” says Lepage. “Thanks to their support, we have resources to initiate broad, innovative projects in the college. Part of my job will be to help departments scale up from the individual efforts of professors who have initiated new models of teaching to a departmentwide curriculum of engaged learning.”

Many of the college’s more than 700 instructors already use active learning techniques. Assistant Professor Andrew Hicks’ Elements of Music class features a broad collaboration among faculty across the music department and hands-on, interactive opportunities for students, such as experimentation with instruments, an in-class sound art installation, and collaborative performance and dance.

“Students learn best when they’re actively engaged, so each year I try something new,” says Suzanne Mettler, the Clinton Rossiter Professor of American Institutions. Last year she added iClickers, an audience response system, to her Introduction to American Government and Politics class, which already features an engaged learning exercise that simulates the budget process in the real U.S. Senate. The iClickers enabled Mettler to assess how much students understood in their assigned reading.

Emerging technologies offer tremendous possibilities in all disciplines, Lepage notes.

“The iClicker, for example, is a powerful tool for the kind of humanities and social science questions with no clear-cut answers. Audience response technologies enable all students, even in a large class, to participate and contribute to class discussions.”

One misconception about engaged learning models is that they are meant to replace lectures, and that is incorrect, says Lepage.

“Active learning models use short lectures in strategic ways, teaching according to how people learn most effectively. Studies show that student-student discussion followed by a lecture results in the best learning. Exercising your knowledge by talking to someone is hugely beneficial in cementing knowledge.”

Measured results from the ALI courses at Cornell prove the point. There have been significant improvements in student learning, as reflected by their performance on exam questions. “It’s impressive what the faculty have done,” says Lepage.

Student feedback from active learning classes has been overwhelmingly positive. After taking Introduction to Neuroscience with Ron Harris-Warrick, the William T. Keeton Professor of Biological Sciences, a student wrote, “I now understand what it is like to BE a scientist.”

Linda B. Glaser is a staff writer for the College of Arts & Sciences.

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