Master of New Professional Studies (MNPS)
University Programs
700 The New Professionalism: Theory and Practice (3:3:0).
An experiential exploration of contemporary and relevant ethical theories and
their diverse applications to the professional studies field. This course examines
issues such as the ethical relationship between the professionals and clients,
ethical accountability and responsibility, the ethos of institutions, and the
professional's role in sustaining ethical standards. Philosophical and pedagogical
assumptions made by the individual in understanding professional management issues
and the social and individual purposes of being a professional are examined reflectively
against a broad range of philosophical, social, political, and economic imperatives
affecting many organizations. MNPS 700 will be customized for each track to
reflect the specialized nature of the respective tracks. To learn about the detailed
course content, please contact appropriate program directors.
702 The New Professional as Reflective Practitioner (3:3:0).
The changes in organization identity and understanding are epistemological, as
well as structural and ethical. This course identifies the central problems in
epistemology, and examines how an epistemology appropriate to professional practice
may be constructed, what is meant by the notion of "ways of knowing"
and the "reflective practitioner," and the implications for professional
learning. The core issues of generalizability, objective knowledge and understanding,
and the nature of evidence, truth, and meaning and how they affect the nature
of organizational reality and the professional'spractice are studied. Special
attention is given to developing the skills for "double-loop learning"
and reflection in professional lives (e.g., through journals, narrative autobiography,
and imaginative literature). MNPS 702 will be customized for each track to
reflect the specialized nature of the respective tracks. To learn about the detailed
course content, please contact appropriate program directors.
703 Technology and Learning in the New Professions (3:3:0).
Although various technological modes are used throughout the program (e.g., teacher-student,
student-student contact via electronic mail), specific teaching in this core course
provides for the development of software tools aimed at facilitating collaborative
work, such as Lotus Notes, Folio Views, and the Virtual Notebook system. Specifically,
the course examines in detail the enormous potential for enhancing the way organizations,
not merely professionals, can learn, notably through the development of Internet
literacy, and skills in using differing Internet navigation tools. The course
is rooted in applying technology to real-world problems in different professional
worksites, offering in-depth training in the use and development of groupware
applications. In all other courses, there will be requirements for the use of
technology in learning. MNPS 703 will be customized for each track to reflect
the specialized nature of the respective tracks. To learn about the detailed course
content, please contact appropriate program directors.
704 Research Methodologies in the New Professionalism (3:3:0).
Corequisite: EDUC 597. In the social sciences and specifically in the
field of professional studies, a positivist epistemology with its implications
for the application of methodologies drawn from the physical and natural sciences
has proved inadequate. From anthropology, sociology, and other disciplines, a
"thick" understanding of what is needed to create a better praxis can
be created. Kurt Lewin, for example, dubbed his methodological invention "action
research," arguing that "there is nothing so practical as a good theory."
Lewin called for a form of research that starts with the participants describing
reality as they see it, reflecting on it, and deriving theories and learning that
are immediately applicable to concrete situations. This course concentrates on
understanding and using research methodologies from such varied sources as Friere,
McKeon, and Janowitz, with a practical team activity in which students study an
organization or aspects of it, using ethnography, field study, or any appropriately
defensible research methodology. MNPS 704 will be customized for each track
to reflect the specialized nature of the respective tracks. To learn about the
detailed course content, please contact appropriate program directors.
720 Learning Community (3:3:0). Prerequisites: Candidates
for the MNPS (Organizational Learning) degree only. A series of workshops,
seminars, and readings groups involving at least 60 hours of contact time and
culminating in a two-day retreat during which candidates for the M.S. in New Professional
Studies (Organizational Learning) do presentations to the class and to the faculty
on their research practica. The theme of this module is communication, collaboration,
and interaction in organizations. After an initial one-and-a-half day workshop,
MNPS candidates meet with all faculty once a month as a readings group, to give
talks and presentations on the application of organizational learning ideas in
their organizations, to discuss current issues in organizational learning, and
to provide feedback about the use of collaborative computing technology in the
learning process.
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