Keck Foundation funds leadership program with $400,000 grant
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- Richmond will work with two California colleges to develop program as a national model
- Leadership to be integrated across the arts and sciences curriculum
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The W.M. Keck Foundation has awarded a three-year,
$400,000 grant to the University to integrate the teaching of
responsible leadership across the arts and sciences curriculum
on its campus and create a transferable model for other colleges
around the country. Richmond will work collaboratively on the
project with Claremont McKenna College and Loyola
Marymount University, both of California.
Faculty and administrators of each college will develop and
evaluate team-taught courses on responsible leadership in
eight specific disciplines. Faculty development workshops and
undergraduate research projects will be built into the program,
and in the third year, the colleges will host a conference to
introduce the concept to faculty from approximately 40 other
liberal arts colleges.
At a time when concern for civic responsibility and leadership
issues has increased, “The field of leadership studies as
an interdisciplinary examination of how to affect change has
greatly matured,” said Dr. Kenneth P. Ruscio, dean of the
Jepson School of Leadership Studies and director of the
project.
The Jepson School, founded in 1992, is the only undergraduate
school in the country devoted to the field of leadership.
Today, 150 Richmond students are majoring in leadership
studies and another 177 students in other fields are enrolled in
leadership courses. Claremont McKenna’s Kravis Leadership
Institute supports that college’s mission of preparing students
for responsible leadership in business, government and the
professions. The Institute for Leadership Studies at Loyola
Marymount educates students about leadership and prepares
them for leadership positions. More than 900 American colleges
and universities have leadership offerings of some sort,
ranging from workshops to undergraduate majors to master’s level
degrees, Ruscio said.
The project grew out of a Richmond course titled “Arts and
Leadership,” which examined how leaders are portrayed in art
and how artists shape the perception of leaders, said Ruscio.
Other liberal arts disciplines that could contribute to the
study of leadership and develop courses include economics, politics,
psychology, science, history, literature and religion, he added.
All three colleges have a strong commitment to undergraduate
student research. The grant will provide funding for three students
to pursue research related to each new course, and students will
present their findings in summer workshops in 2005 and 2006.
“Liberal arts colleges almost universally proclaim the mission
of ‘educating future leaders,’ but the phrase has devolved into a
platitude,” said Ruscio. “With this support from the Keck Foundation,
we hope to demonstrate clearly and emphatically how a
liberal arts education prepares today’s students for the responsibilities
they will face as leaders in an increasingly complex world.”
Based in Los Angeles, the W.M. Keck Foundation was established
in 1954 by the late W.M. Keck, founder of Superior Oil Co.
The foundation’s grants focus primarily on pioneering efforts in
medical research, science and engineering. The foundation also
supports undergraduate science and humanities education. Its
Southern California grant program provides support in the areas
of health care, civic and community services, education and the
arts, with an emphasis on children.
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