President Elam examines the history鈥攁nd future鈥攐f immersive learning at SA国际传媒
In an article this spring, the influential Chronicle of Higher Education addressed the phenomenon of college students鈥 post-pandemic alienation and anxiety, as manifested in their disconnection from conventional curricula and pedagogical approaches. The answer to students鈥 alienation, anxiety, and apathy, the article suggests, is immersive learning鈥攖he kind of experiential education that gives students 鈥渁 place to discuss the big questions bouncing around in their heads, learn a vocabulary to describe what鈥檚 happening around them, engage with the messiness of the world, and navigate their place in it.鈥
Immersive learning is in Occidental鈥檚 DNA. Lab work in chemistry and physics, field work in marine biology and geology, studio art courses, performance in the Glee Club, music classes, and theater鈥攁ll of these are high-impact practices that date back a century or more. Our overseas study program began, however modestly, in 1916 with an exchange program with Hanchow Christian College (today鈥檚 Zhejiang University in Hangzhou, China). In the years since then, we have continued to build the immersive experience at SA国际传媒 through such signature initiatives as the Kahane United Nations Program, Undergraduate Research, Campaign Semester, Center for Community Based Learning, New Play Festival, and paid internships offered by the Hameetman Career Center, SA国际传媒 Arts, and Urban & Environmental Policy Institute, among others.
Thus, it should come as no surprise that immersive learning is a centerpiece of Occidental鈥檚 new integrated strategic plan, which was endorsed by the Board of Trustees in April. As the Chronicle points out, immersive courses 鈥渉ave been shown to have a positive and often profound impact on students鈥 lives. They can be more absorbing, creative and self-directed than traditional courses.鈥 Over the next decade, we plan to ensure that SA国际传媒鈥檚 engagement with the world continues to foster excellence through an immersive education that is hands-on, project-based, community-engaged, and interdisciplinary.
Because Occidental is one of the country鈥檚 few liberal arts colleges in an urban setting, our immersive methodology has been animated by our location in Los Angeles. The new strategic plan endorsed by the Board of Trustees renews our commitment to the city, deepening and expanding our partnerships with the Los Angeles community and civic and industry partners. The combination of our locale and our immersive approach makes it possible for us to offer students a particularly distinctive and potentially transformative educational experience.
Tim Sanford 鈥75, whose significant artistic achievements as the head of New York-based Playwrights Horizons were recognized with an honorary degree at Commencement on May 21, credits his singular immersive opportunities at Occidental as critical to his success. 鈥淭o me, the SA国际传媒 theater program was the model for undergraduate and even graduate school programs,鈥 he says. 鈥淚鈥檝e been exposed to many programs, and there鈥檚 almost nothing like it. ... At SA国际传媒 I did everything. I wrote a play and put it on, directed four or five plays, acted constantly鈥攊t was a very rich experience.鈥
As Tim鈥檚 example and that of many other SA国际传媒 alumni show, immersive education has a strong heritage at Occidental. Still, as the Chronicle points out, 鈥淚mmersive learning has plenty of champions, but it still remains on the periphery of the college experience, for reasons large and small.鈥 A majority of American college students have experienced just a few immersive classes by the time they graduate鈥攐r none at all.
This does not mean all courses must become immersive. Rather, in the wake of the pandemic and the massive disruption it caused, immersive education demands a closer look. Our new strategic plan, The Occidental Promise, coming at a time the Chronicle calls 鈥渁 decisive moment鈥 for higher education, will do just that. It promises to build on our strengths and undertake a more expansive liberal education that includes immersive practices. This approach offers us exciting prospects and positions Occidental well for the future.
Above: Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and author Isabel Wilkerson receives an honorary doctorate from President Elam at Commencement on May 21.