Skip to main content

PACEs in Higher Education

Higher Education: What Do We Mean?

 

I'll be the first to admit that when I think of the phrase "higher education," certain things come to mind: ivy-clad red brick buildings, crisp fall afternoons punctuated by the staccato sounds of a university drumline rehearsal, and young wide-eyed students hanging on every word from the profound professor who looms large over the time-worn lectern. These stylized visualizations are informed by my own experiences in college, surely, but also by larger cultural narratives that contour the shape of what we might mean when we say "higher education." 

In this community, we'll talk with each other about ACEs and trauma-informed practices or care (TIC) in higher education. As we start co-creating this dialogue, we should pause and take stock of who or what counts as an institution of higher learning. When I was writing my dissertation (I went to graduate school at a large, urban, R1 university) and preparing to go on the job market, I fantasized about teaching at a particular kind of university (one with a killer marching band, idyllic tree-lined paths, and a vibrant scholarly community). My post-graduate reality, however, manifested as a slick, corporate-feeling community college with a strong trades/vocational program. No marching bands. No school song. Smart, travel-weary commuter students with three jobs and two kids. A 5/5 teaching load. Make no mistake, my community college is precisely where I am meant to be; I would not trade my good fortune for a sliver of a different reality. This experience, though, has opened my eyes to the fact that I've been guilty of failing to consider all the possible institutions that "count" as being in higher ed. 

Too, I've come to realize when we talk about higher education, we may not all be on the same page. For some, categorizing a trade or vocational school as an institution of higher learning may feel strange. For others, thinking that students who attend an Ivy League college need any ACEs-related resources may be unfathomable. Taking time to acknowledge ways our mental pictures include or foreclose what counts as an institution in need of an ACEs perspective will, hopefully, encourage as many conversations to the table as possible. 

The best practice, I think, is to open this conversation so that we may define what the term means to each of us. In this way, we can create a working conceptualization, perhaps fantasies and all, of what we mean when we say "ACEs in higher education."

What are your thoughts? Please join the conversation!

Add Comment

Comments (7)

Newest · Oldest · Popular
Suzette Reed posted:

Thanks for creating this blog. My team and I are trying to work on ACEs in higher ed. For us, the place we are meant to be is not so different than a community college. We are a university and I actually run our only PhD program, but our student body is non-traditional and often under prepared. I think this is the future of higher education. I think access to a broader population is necessary for our success as a nation and it requires us to re-think how we engage a student body with larger percentages of unresolved ACEs.

Hi, Suzette. Welcome to the community! Do you mind sharing information about where you're at and what your team is doing? 

Thanks for creating this blog. My team and I are trying to work on ACEs in higher ed. For us, the place we are meant to be is not so different than a community college. We are a university and I actually run our only PhD program, but our student body is non-traditional and often under prepared. I think this is the future of higher education. I think access to a broader population is necessary for our success as a nation and it requires us to re-think how we engage a student body with larger percentages of unresolved ACEs.

Andrew,

I also teach at a community college, and am so glad you have raised this need to expand and diversify what we mean by higher ed.  Perhaps because so many of my students are first generation, and have to stretch resources of time and money to pursue their college education, they bring a sharpness and investment to the question: what do we as a culture mean by higher education?  What is the function of a college education: transfer? vocational and trade? lifelong learning?  What I've come to treasure about the 2 year college as a site for inquiry is that in some ways, the questions that are pressing and vivid for our community (function, affordability, access, completion) distill the national questions regarding higher ed. 

Certainly the labor force demands post-secondary education as baseline eligibility for sustainable employment.   The Bureau of Labor Statistics presents that information clearly.  But that does not fundamentally answer your question: what do we mean by higher education?  The history of higher education in the US has been largely one of exclusive access largely restricted to the socioeconomic elite.  Public elementary and secondary education historically served the need for a uniform workforce and acculturation.  And yet, at the heart of the so-called democratic project that is the United States, is a critical need for an educated electorate. And I see literature and have been in discussions emphasizing higher ed as having a responsibility to promote critical thinking and civic engagement.  Perhaps especially in our current political climate, the civic and critical value is all the more necessary, all the more elusive.  But if we take the gist of the American promise/myth/challenge of socioeconomic mobility, and apply that value to higher education, the college (2 year, 4 year, face to face, online, etc.) becomes a site for negotiating obstacles to that pursuit given the current structures----standardized testing, core curriculum, etc. 

And if the mission of the college is to negotiate obstacles, then trauma certainly impacts academic resilience, the learning brain, ability to form and sustain healthy relationships, promoting resilience behaviors.  And I think community colleges here, and likely public colleges and universities also, offer much. In the just over 50 years cc's have been a viable option (albeit loaded with significant stigma and under-resourced), each undergoes regular mission review so there is regional flexibility in a national context.  I'm looking forward to the day when trauma-informed is understood as obstacle to systemic academic resilience, which it is, even as its community members demonstrate extraordinary psychological and physical resilience on a daily basis.  Ultimately, ACE's quantify forces working against access, persistence, and retention. 

Copyright ÂĐ 2023, PACEsConnection. All rights reserved.
×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×