In Fall semester 2008, incoming freshman at Brigham Young

University-Idaho were introduced to a new general education program

known as Foundations. This program has been designed to replace the

previous general education courses and provide a more focused and

complete approach to learning.

The Foundations program stemmed from a charge to raise the quality of

every experience a BYU-Idaho student will have. In his inaugural

address on Oct. 11, 2005, President Kim B. Clark stated:

\"As we pursue that mission in the years ahead, I believe there are

three great imperatives before us, three great things the Lord would

have us do. The first is that we must raise substantially the quality

of every aspect of the experience our students have. As good as it is

today (and believe me, it is very, very good), every dimension of the

BYU-Idaho experience — spiritual, intellectual, social — must increase in

its quality. We must do all of this to better prepare our students for

a very challenging world. This will require inspired innovation and

important changes in many aspects of our work.\"

\"The Foundations initiative has been under development for more than

two years,\" said Bruce C. Kusch, associate academic vice president for

curriculum. \"This is a dramatic change to our general education

program; it has been completely redesigned.\"

There are a few key differences between the previous general education

program and the new Foundations program. First, Foundations requires

students to gain a more focused education. Past general education

courses focused on students receiving a broad education in areas

outside their chosen discipline. \"The traditional general education

program was not meeting the needs of students once they entered the

workforce or entered graduate school,\" said Kent Barrus, director of

career and academic advising.The Foundations program differs from general education in how students

are able to choose their required courses. In the previous general

education program, students had a longer and more diverse list of

classes to choose from. This created a significantly different

experience for each student. Foundations has purposefully limited the

number of classes that a student can choose from. Therefore, all

students that complete Foundations will have similar experiences and

will have received a more focused educational experience.

Second, the Foundations program uses the BYU-Idaho Learning Model and

applies the principle of students teaching students. The principles of

the Learning Model ask students to prepare, to teach one another and to

ponder and prove. \"Every Foundations course is designed to implement

the BYU-Idaho Learning Model,\" Kusch said.

The third difference between the previous general education program and

Foundations are the skills that students will gain from completing

Foundations courses. \"The important and underlying principle of the

Foundations program is that it helps students learn how to learn. They

will learn skills that will carry over to their lives after they leave

BYU-Idaho,\" Barrus said. Foundations will assist students in gaining

critical thinking skills that will benefit them in the workforce and

will help them learn how to analyze situations and solve problems. The

principles learned in Foundations will also benefit students in their

present and future homes. \"In the home, they will be able to resolve

conflicts and analyze situations,\" Barrus said.

The last major difference between general education courses and

Foundations deals with how the curriculum for Foundations was created.

Foundations courses have been designed to be interdisciplinary,

providing students with the ability to dive more deeply into the

various subject matter areas. For example, the Pakistan Crossroads and

Conflict Foundations course required faculty members from the history,

geography and religion departments to formulate the curriculum for the

class.

\"This has required thousands and thousands of hours of preparation by

the faculty,\" Kusch said, \"all with the intent to give students a

better foundation to build upon for their lives and their BYU-Idaho

experience.\"

Jeff Andersen, a faculty member in the Department of Humanities and Philosophy, teaches the Foundations course Heroic Journey.

The curriculum in the Heroic Journey course has made an increased

effort to implement the Learning Model. Classes prior to Foundations

were generally lecture based. \"Lecture has its place and is still used

to lay a foundation upon which group learning is based, but more

insights are gained through group discussions than through [the

teacher's] own knowledge,\" Andersen said.

Kip Hartvigsen, Department of English faculty, believes that

Foundations courses can benefit teachers as well as students.

\"Foundations brings teachers to class with freshness. They have to

learn along with their students. The challenge of teaching Foundations

courses renews a teacher's investment in the course he or she is

teaching. Teachers are learning as they teach,\" Hartvigsen said.

The Foundations program is not without its challenges. \"Foundations is

a significant change from the previous general education program. It

requires a complete paradigm shift. But this will be one of the things

that will set our students apart,\" Barrus said.

The new Foundations requirements generally will not affect current

juniors or seniors as most of them should have completed all of their

general education courses. However, incoming freshmen will be required

to take Foundations courses. Other students may choose to enroll in

some Foundations courses, depending on the amount of previous general

education work completed. For transfer students, if an associate degree

has been earned, the Foundations requirement is complete except for the

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Foundations Capstone course and Eternal Truths, which are the religion

courses. The curriculum for the Capstone course is currently being

developed and will be offered in future semesters.

More information may be obtained by visiting www.byui.edu/foundations and www.byui.edu/learningmodel.

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