Stories from the FieldWe introduce here a series of PKAL Learning Spaces Collaboratory stories presenting institutional case studies that illustrate—in projects of different scope and intent—best practices and lessons learned in the process of shaping new spaces and renewing existing spaces that:
These case studies illustrate planning approaches that anticipate the future, that begin by ‘backward engineering,’ identifying what it is that the user (the learner) should come to know and be able to do as a result of their experiences in the spaces to be shaped and reshaped. The intent of these portfolios is to share different approaches to dealing with the puzzle of interlacing relationships in the process of shaping exemplary student-centered learning spaces and to promote informed discussions about and planning, shaping, and renewing such spaces—on individual campuses and within the growing community of stakeholders and collaborators. As David Orr notes, campus buildings can be seen as crystallized pedagogy with their own hidden curriculum. The spaces that are the focus of the case studies to be presented in the PKAL LSC Portfolios are evidence of an institutional vision of what difference the spaces will make for the learners—now and into the future. The intent of these case studies is to “push-the-envelope” within the community of stakeholders—challenging communities to continually grapple with the level of change and innovation within the growing community of practice.
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