|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
HARVARD GAZETTE ARCHIVES
Coordinated calendar recommendedCommittee suggests deferring adoption until completion of pending curricular reviews
By Beth Potier
Harvard News Office In its report released Monday (March 22), the Harvard University Committee on Calendar Reform, appointed last fall by the president, provost, and deans,
An instructional start date in early September immediately following Labor Day in most or all years. Completion of fall semester exams (including reading period for those Schools that have it) before winter break.
Conclusion of the academic year and Commencement by the end of May. Coordination of vacations such as spring break and Thanksgiving break. The committee also recommends that the University delay making any final decisions concerning a framework of shared dates until Schools undergoing curricular reviews - FAS, Harvard Medical School (HMS), Harvard Divinity School (HDS), and Harvard Graduate School of Education (GSE) - complete those reviews. The president, provost, and deans issued a statement endorsing both the substantive and procedural recommendations of the committee: "to move to the proposed framework of a limited number of shared dates for all Schools but to defer final decisions concerning adoption and implementation of any such framework until after the anticipated completion of the Curriculum Review by the Faculty of Arts and Sciences at the end of the 2004-2005 academic year." "The main purpose of our work on the Calendar Committee was to foster greater connection across the various faculties," says Verba. "This is really in response to the changing nature of learning and research, which requires much more interdisciplinary, cross-professional activity." Verba noted that cross-registration and joint teaching across the faculties of Harvard's Schools is pedagogically valuable and increasing. Harvard Business School (HBS) students work with the Department of Economics in FAS, for instance; HMS students do research with faculty in FAS; and Verba's own government seminars host students from the GSE, Kennedy School of Government (KSG), or Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH). Yet the asynchronous nature of the Schools' schedules makes this interdisciplinary work clumsy at best - with semester start dates and breaks varying by as much as several weeks - and prohibitive at worst.
Crossing Harvard's bordersThe committee report, with one member's dissension, "strongly endorses the view that achieving greater coordination of calendars across the University is important for promoting closer connections among faculty and students from different Schools in an era when excellence in education and scholarship depends increasingly on learning that extends across traditional organizational boundaries." In addition to meeting three times over the fall semester, the committee surveyed the landscape at Harvard and beyond, collecting data on School calendars, constraints, historical information, faculty and student concerns, and practices at peer institutions. Cross-registration and joint programs among faculties at Harvard and with peer institutions, such as the Massachusetts
Broad supportSupport for the changes recommended by the committee is strong among the University's Schools, the report details. All of Harvard's professional schools either have a calendar that closes the fall semester, including final exams, before winter break, or would like to move to such a calendar. "Coordination of a University calendar holds out enormous promise for many students who would like to benefit from the expertise of other faculties, but, because of scheduling conflicts, cannot," says GSE Dean Ellen Condliffe Lagemann. "For example, a common calendar will allow our policy students or students studying educational administration to benefit from closer ties to the Kennedy and Business Schools, respectively." "The coordinated calendar framework will enhance the Harvard experience across the Schools in important ways," says HBS Dean Kim B. Clark. "By lowering barriers to cross-registration, for example, students will be able to draw upon the remarkable depth and breadth of knowledge throughout the University. This is a significant step toward President Summers' goal of creating a stronger sense of community." In addition, the five students on the committee, who consulted with students at their Schools and with the Undergraduate Council of Harvard College and the Harvard Graduate Council, unanimously support the proposed changes. While the students cited cross-registration as the primary benefit, they also noted that most students believe finishing exams before winter break is optimal for learning. Further, an earlier Commencement would increase students' ability to compete for summer experiences, jobs, and internships.
Flexible January, flexible timingWhile its recommendations are clear and nearly unanimous, the committee remains flexible on several points. First, although the committee's report recommends that a three- to four-week period in January be designated for special study, research, time abroad, or other structured intersession activities, it leaves to individual Schools the determination of their own best uses and lengths of the January period, including the possibility of a longer Winter Break. The committee also recommends that no changes be made to the University-wide calendar until pending curricular reviews at several Schools, notably FAS, are completed. "We were neither empowered, nor did we have the competence to judge the pedagogical plans and curriculum plans of the individual faculties," says Verba. "Since some of the faculties hadn't finished the job of figuring out their curricula, FAS being the big one, we recommended to the president and deans that no action be taken on our recommendations until these other decisions have been made." On Wednesday (March 24), Verba met with the FAS Faculty Council (the advisory committee for the dean of the faculty) on behalf of the committee. The Calendar Reform Committee's report will be presented at the April FAS faculty meeting.Related stories:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||