9.1     Program Content [CR]

Educational programs (a) embody a coherent course of study, (b) are compatible with the stated mission and goals of the institution, and (c) are based upon fields of study appropriate to higher education.

Judgment

x   Compliance           o  Non-Compliance           o Partial Compliance

Narrative  

A. Educational programs embody a coherent course of study

All programs at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette embody a coherent course of study. They include breadth of knowledge and the development of progressively more advanced expertise in the discipline. The following narrative refers primarily to undergraduate programs, as the graduate programs are fully discussed in Section 9.6 (Post-baccalaureate rigor and curriculum). However, some examples of articulation between undergraduate and graduate programs in the same discipline are given to demonstrate program coherence and gradual advancement of learning objectives. All curricula for degree programs follow sequential paths toward 1) increasing levels of integration of knowledge and mastery of topics in a given field, 2) increasing complexity of learning objectives and relevant course assignments, and 3) development of theoretical awareness, analytical skills, and communication of expertise. Course listings, degree requirements, and definitions of all majors and programs are listed in the Catalog.

All undergraduate students acquire breadth of knowledge by completing a 42-credit hour General Education Core Curriculum as part of their degree requirements. Since Fall 2011, the maximum total of semester credit hours required for a baccalaureate degree has been 120. Fifty-five percent of the total hours may be in the major and/or area of specialization. Certain programs require more than 120 semester hours, as stipulated by accreditation or certification; certain programs limit the number of hours in the major and/or area of specialty. All students are required to complete at least 45 semester hours in advanced-level courses (3XX and 4XX levels).

All degree programs are presented in detail in the UL Lafayette Catalog. Degree descriptions include program requirements and curriculum (required number of hours, required courses and electives, required pre-requisites for each course, as well as the General Education Core Curriculum), and minors (if applicable to the individual degree).

The process for curriculum design, review, and development requires multiple stages of oversight. In each department, an internal Curriculum Committee is responsible for regularly reviewing the current curriculum and making course changes based on evolving program needs and articulation of learning outcomes. All course change forms are reviewed either by the Undergraduate Curriculum Committee or the Committee on Graduate Curriculum, based on the level of the courses. The purpose of the Curriculum Committee, which reports directly to the Provost/Vice President for Academic Affairs, is to encourage the orderly growth of the course offerings and new curricula of the University by examining all facets of proposed change in offerings and recommending to the administration only those changes that the committee feels reflect students’ needs. This committee is slated by the Committee on Committees of the Faculty Senate, and is charged with processing course changes, updating course change guidelines, and coordinating with the General Education and Strategic Program Review Committees. Similarly, the purpose of the Graduate Curriculum Committee is to evaluate graduate course additions, deletions, and changes, and to make recommendations to the Graduate Council. The committee considers course proposals, makes recommendations for approval/denial, and submits a written report to the Graduate Council. Decisions of the committee are final, but are reported to the Graduate Council. A copy of the report is presented to the members of the Graduate Council.

Requests for curriculum changes are initiated at the faculty level, then recommended by the Department Head/School Director and the Dean of the college for consideration by the Curriculum Committee or the Graduate Curriculum Committee. In evaluating the proposals, the two committees review:

·         Clarity of the course title, description, and any prerequisite and/or co-requisite requirements;

·         Justification for the course addition, deletion, or change to the course;

·         Duplication and/or infringement on another department's domain; and

·         Quality of the course, qualifications of the faculty, and resources available for the course.

The following program examples demonstrate curricular coherence and the progressive development of competencies, skills, and expertise in a given area.

BS in Chemical Engineering

The curriculum of the BS in Chemical Engineering is aligned with a series of systematic and progressive learning outcomes. The first five semesters of the program build the Math, Chemistry, Biology, and general Engineering foundation necessary to understand the theoretical principles of unit operations used to transport, transform, and recover/reuse raw materials; refine products; and treat waste streams to regulatory levels in the chemical process industries. In these foundational courses, students are taught essential, specific skills necessary to find solutions to engineering problems. During the last three semesters, students apply these foundational principles to design (e.g., size, cost, and model) individual unit operations relevant to chemical process industries. Students also integrate this knowledge to design and simulate chemical facilities, taking into consideration factors such as safety, environmental regulations, energy efficiency, and economics. The work product of the senior design sequence (CHEE 407, Plant Design and CHEE 408, Computer Aided Process Design) is the design of a chemical facility to generate products of global significance. Students defend their designs before a panel of industrial representatives who evaluate communication skills and the ability to answer technical questions on the theory and application of chemical engineering principles associated with the design and performance of industrial equipment to meet operational and financial goals.

Students enrolled in the Chemical Engineering program have the opportunity to actually experience unit operations, such as distillation, reaction, heat exchangers, and extraction during unit operations laboratories (CHEE 403 and CHEE 404). These labs integrate knowledge acquired over several courses (CHEE 302, CHEE 401, CHEE 405, and CHEE 420). Students prepare detailed reports describing theory, objectives, experimental design, results, and analysis of results for the particular unit operations. Prior to initiating experiments, students must defend the safety thereof, and demonstrate their understanding of the theory and operation of the specific equipment to the course instructor.

As can be observed in Table 9.1 – 1 and the flowchart discussed below it, the level of complexity of the program increases significantly every semester. Many of the courses are sequential and build upon each other. This is clearly observed in the sequence of Chemistry and Mathematics courses (CHEM 107 and CHEM 108, CHEM 231 and CHEM 232; Calculus 1, 2, and 3), but also, as mentioned above, in the senior design sequence and unit operations laboratories.

Table 9.1 – 1: Progressive Learning Outcomes in Chemical Engineering

Courses

Learning Outcomes

CHEE 201: Material Balance

CHEE 407: Plant Design

a.       An ability to apply knowledge of mathematics, science, and engineering

The Engineering courses in the Chemical Engineering curriculum all use Math and Science to solve complex engineering problems. The large amount of Chemistry that is learned is applied in courses from Material Balance (CHEE 201) to Plant Design (CHEE 407). Chemical Engineering courses become progressively more complex as students progress in the program. In CHEE 201 (scheduled during the sophomore year), students learn to apply Math, Chemistry, and basic Engineering principles to calculate mass and energy flows into and out of a system. Other Chemical Engineering courses build on this foundation. In CHEE 407, students apply this knowledge to design a chemical facility.

CHEE 405: Heat Transfer

CHEE 302: Transfer Operations

CHEE 420: Reaction Engineering

CHEE 401: Stage Operations

CHEE 403 and 404: Unit Operations Laboratory 1 and 2

CHEE 413: Process Control

b.       An ability to design and conduct experiments and to analyze and interpret data

The Laboratories in Chemical Engineering, Unit Operations Laboratory 1 and 2 (CHEE 403 and 404), and Process Control (CHEE 413) allow for the performance of experiments and data interpretation associated with Chemical Engineering unit operations (e.g., reaction engineering, separations, and fluids transport). Students are taught to prepare professional presentations and reports. Interpretation of data must be directly linked to Chemical Engineering principles. Prior to performing the unit operations labs, students must complete courses on the specific unit operations, such as Heat Transfer (CHEE 405), Transfer Operations (CHEE 302), Reaction Engineering (CHEE 420), and Stage Operations (CHEE 401).

CHEE 407: Chemical Engineering Plant Design

and

CHEE 408: Computer-Aided Process Design

CHEE 302: Transfer Operations

or

CHEE 405: Process Heat Transfer

c.        An ability to design a system, component, or process to meet desired needs within realistic constraints such as economic, environmental, social, political, ethical, health and safety, manufacturability, and sustainability

The two senior plant design courses (CHEE 407 and CHEE 408) formally require the design of industrial chemical processes. To reach this point, students take several courses such as CHEE 302 or CHEE 405, in which distillation systems and heat exchanger units are designed as part of the course assessment instruments.

CHEE 317: Materials of Engineering

ENGR 305: Transport Phenomena

CHEE 210: Engineering Analysis

CHEE 400: Process Simulation

CHEE 403 and 404: Chemical Engineering Lab I and II

CHEE 407: Chemical Engineering Plant Design

and

CHEE 408: Computer-Aided Process Design

d.       An ability to function on multi-disciplinary teams

Chemical Engineering students have the opportunity to work on teams with their peers, as well as with students in other departments. In Materials of Engineering (CHEE 317), teams of Chemical and Mechanical Engineering students work on a materials selection problem. In Transport Phenomena (ENGR 305), the Chemical and Petroleum Engineering students work in groups on a transport design project. In addition, in CHEE 210, 400, 403, 404, 407, and 408, CHEE teams are selected to work on projects.

 

Every Chemical Engineering course

e.       An ability to identify, formulate, and solve engineering problems

This outcome is covered in every Chemical Engineering course in the curriculum. All of our courses solve problems and follow a systematic approach.

CHEE 307: Safety, Ethics, and Environmental Policy

f.        An understanding of professional and ethical responsibility

Professionalism is a behavior pattern in which a person does not react immediately to a given problem, but analyzes the situation and responds appropriately in a measured manner. The pedagogical preparation of faculty members, as well as the interaction of faculty members with peers and students provides a model of professionalism in the department, and aligns with the code of ethics of Chemical Engineering, which is prominently posted throughout the department. It emphasizes professionalism and ethical responsibility, and communicates to the students the importance of integrating these ethical principles in decisions associated with the Chemical Engineering practice, in order to protect the public. The students take a safety, ethics, and environmental policy course (CHEE 307), and are encouraged to become professional engineers by taking the Fundamentals of Engineering (FE) Exam while they are still in college.

ENGL 101: Intro to Academic Writing

ENGL 102: Writing and Research about Culture

ENGL Elective

CMCN 310: Public Speaking

CHEE 403 and 404: Chemical Engineering Lab I and II

CHEE 413: Process Control

g.       An ability to communicate effectively

The program curriculum includes three required English courses and one Communication course in Public Speaking. In addition, the three Chemical Engineering laboratory courses require students to write laboratory reports and make numerous PowerPoint presentations. In Plant Design, the final design project is a formal report and group presentation to faculty, peers, and Industrial External Advisory Board members.

CHEE 407: Chemical Engineering Plant Design

and

CHEE 408: Computer-Aided Process Design

 

h.       The broad education necessary to understand the impact of engineering solutions in a global, economic, environmental, and societal context

The senior Plant Design courses (CHEE 407 and 408) incorporate global, economic, environmental, and societal considerations into student design experiences. The concept of an effective plant design means that all these factors are discussed and evaluated. This concept of an “effective” design that incorporates all of these considerations is taught in these courses and emphasized throughout the curriculum.

 

i.         A recognition of the need for, and an ability to engage in, life-long learning

This objective is not specifically covered in any single course, but is a philosophy that becomes incorporated in the students’ thought process over the course of their educational experience within the department. Through discussions and assignments designed to illustrate that the field of chemical engineering is a technically dynamic one, students come to understand they will be required to maintain a continual education process throughout their careers. In junior and senior courses, students are assigned projects in which they work independently or in teams to seek solutions to open-ended problems, and write reports on their findings. In laboratories, students must develop their own operational procedures to achieve an objective with minimal direction. Students are encouraged to take the FE examination and to strive for professional registration.

CHEE 317: Materials of Engineering

and

ENGR 305: Transport Phenomena

j.         A knowledge of contemporary issues

In the first materials course (CHEE 317) and in the Transport Phenomena Course (ENGR 305) the faculty assigns projects to individual students to obtain information on a specific topic. These projects expand the students’ knowledge of materials and fluids. In the senior class, students are required to attend two graduate seminars in the Spring semester to expand their knowledge of the profession. Plant Design informs students about options that are available when designing a process.

CHEE 210: Engineering Analysis

k.       An ability to use the techniques, skills, and modern engineering tools necessary for engineering practice

In their sophomore year, Chemical Engineering students take a formal computer programming course, Visual Basic (CHEE 210), which is intended to give them the experience of working with logic-based programming methods. To ensure that they remain proficient with this simulation software program, students also use the ASPEN process simulation package in various subsequent courses, such as Chemical Engineering Calculations (CHEE 201) and, in their junior year, in the Unit Operations (CHEE 302) and Heat Transfer courses (CHEE 405G). In the senior year, Process Simulation (CHEE 400G) introduces MatLab, Polymath, and programming in Excel. All of these tools are integrated in plant design and process design projects during the senior year. Knowledge of these tools is critical to the development of a well-prepared engineer.

 

Faculty advisors and students use a flow chart in designing their schedules for the upcoming semester. It provides a map of the curriculum, and summarizes program requirements, pre-requisites per course, courses per semester, and the degree of course complexity as students progress through the curriculum from semester to semester. The chart also illustrates for students the integration of Chemical Engineering, Math, and Science courses.

BS in Computer Science

The curriculum of the BS in Computer Science uses fundamental principles from mathematics and programming as its foundation. In the first two years, students take courses such as MATH 270, MATH 301, CMPS 150, CMPS 260, CMPS 261, and CMPS 341, which build a solid mathematical and computational basis for problem-solving and developing new computer programs. More advanced courses at the 300 and 400 levels impart new knowledge in the subject, build on the prior courses, and strengthen students’ advanced problem-solving and software development skills. In 400-level courses, students acquire the experience of creating new, sizable software of significance; evaluate the quality of their proposed solutions; work in groups, as well as individually; and communicate their work professionally, both orally and in writing. Students also consider issues in depth, such as the speed, complexity, and accuracy of their solutions, as well as their societal, ethical, and global impact. Through its coherent design, the BS in Computer Science curriculum provides increasingly higher levels of learning experiences, as defined in Bloom’s Taxonomy. Courses progress from 100 to 400 level, with the highest experience provided in CMPS 400-level courses. The curriculum meets ABET's "a through k" outcomes, which have been adopted as the learning objectives by the School of Computing and Informatics, the Ray P. Authement College of Sciences, and UL Lafayette. Table 9.1 – 2 explains how the courses in the Computer Science curriculum meet the progressive learning outcomes.

Table 9.1 – 2: Progressive and Systematic Learning Outcomes in Computer Science

Courses

Learning Outcomes

CMPS 341: Formal Foundations of Computer Science

a.       An ability to apply knowledge of computing and mathematics appropriate to the discipline

CMPS 341, Formal Foundations of Computer Science, enables learning outcome (a) by covering formal logic and its applications, proof of correctness, sets and combinatorics, induction, recursion, and recurrence equations, relations, functions and graphs, shortest path, minimal spanning tree, planarity and finite-state machines. Students are taught the concepts and are asked to apply their knowledge of those concepts to solve problems on homework, tests, and the final exam.

CMPS 453: Intro to Software Methodology

CMPS 455: Intro to Operating Systems

CMPS 460: Database Management Systems

b.       An ability to analyze a problem and identify and define the computing requirements appropriate to its solution

CMPS 453, Introduction to Software Methodology, CMPS 455, Introduction to Operating Systems, and CMPS 460, Database Management Systems enable learning outcome (b) through assignment of projects. Students are assigned design and implementation projects in each of these courses. Analyzing a problem and defining computing requirements such as data structures, software methodology, algorithm, or databases are the first steps toward solving problems assigned in those projects.

CMPS 453: Intro to Software Methodology

CMPS 455: Intro to Operating Systems

CMPS 460: Database Management Systems

c.        An ability to design, implement, and evaluate a computer-based system, process, component, or program to meet desired needs

As stated above for enabling learning outcome (b), CMPS 453, CMPS 455, and CMPS 460 assign projects that require students to identify requirements, then implement and test them thoroughly. Significant importance is given to implementing for correctness and efficiency, and stress-testing for functional correctness.

CMPS 453: Intro to Software Methodology

CMPS 455: Intro to Operating Systems

CMPS 460: Database Management Systems

d.       An ability to function effectively on teams to accomplish a common goal

CMPS 453, CMPS 455, and CMPS 460 each provide at least one team project that requires students to function effectively in a team setting, and to complete projects by the deadline.

CMPS 310: Computers in Society

e.       An ability to understand professional, ethical, legal, security, and social issues and responsibilities

CMPS 310, Computers in Society focuses on enabling students to understand professional, ethical, legal, security, and social issues and responsibility. Students are taught the relevant theory and are tested on the relevant concepts. In addition, they are asked to show their understanding of such concepts by writing and orally presenting their understanding of issues associated with an important problem.

CMPS 310: Computers in Society

CMPS 430: Computer Architecture

CMPS 453: Intro to Software Methodology

CMPS 460: Database Management Systems

f.        An ability to communicate effectively with a range of audiences

CMPS 310, CMPS 430, CMPS 453, and CMPS 460 all require students to make oral presentations. For example, in CMPS 310, students make oral presentations on a topic they have researched, and expose their views on the impact of choices on social, ethical, legal, and public interest issues. In CMPS 430, students make oral presentations on an emerging topic of research or development in computer architecture. In CMPS 453 and CMPS 460, each team makes a presentation of its project.

CMPS 310: Computers in Society

CMPS 430: Computer Architecture

CMPS 453: Intro to Software Methodology

 

g.       An ability to analyze the local and global impact of computing on individuals, organizations, and society

CMPS 310, CMPS 430, and CMPS 453 enable this outcome. CMPS 310 challenges students to analyze computing issues and their impact on society. CMPS 430 covers the importance of hardware design for efficiency, accuracy, speed, and low power consumption. CMPS 453 addresses how design choices impact the cost of software development. CMPS 453 also presents individual roles in software development, and the impact of team size on a project.

CMPS 430: Computer Architecture

CMPS 453: Intro to Software Methodology

CMPS 460: Database Management Systems

h.       An ability to engage in continuing professional development

CMPS 430 introduces students to the significance of rapidly changing processors, memory capacities, and peripherals, and how such changes impact software development. CMPS 453 introduces students to paradigms in software engineering, and explores how new methods, such as agile development, are more beneficial than previous approaches. CMPS 460 enables students to work with a relational database through a web interface. Students are taught how different databases and languages shape design and development. Through these courses, students understand the importance of maintaining current knowledge on emerging software and hardware technologies.

CMPS 150: Intro to Computer Science

CMPS 260: Intro to Data Structures and Software Design

CMPS 261: Advanced Data Structures and Software Engineering

CMPS 351: Computer Organization and Assembly Language Programming

CMPS 450: Programming Languages

CMPS 455: Operating Systems

CMPS 460: Database Management Systems

i.         An ability to use current techniques, skills, and tools necessary for computing practices

CMPS 150, Introduction to Computer Science teaches students programming with Python under Linux and Windows. CMPS 260m Introduction to Data Structures and Software Design teaches students how to program in C++ under Linux. CMPS 261, Advanced Data Structures and Software Engineering teaches students how to solve problems from algorithmic and software engineering points of view. CMPS 351, Computer Organization and Assembly Language Programming teaches students how to program in MIPS assembly language. CMPS 450 covers a variety of languages and requires students to implement projects using at least two languages. CMPS 455 requires students to implement their projects using C and C++. CMPS 460 requires students to implement their projects using PHP and MySQL.

 

CMPS 453: Intro to Software Methodology

CMPS 455: Operating Systems

 

j.         An ability to apply mathematical foundations, algorithmic principles, and computer science theory in the modeling and design of computer-based systems that demonstrates comprehension of the tradeoffs involved in design choices

In CMPS 453, students learn how the choice of different software design styles impacts the selection of tools, as well as the development cycle for software projects. Students apply that theory to projects and discuss their choices during project demonstrations. In CMPS 455, students are asked to analyze their choice of algorithms and data structures for at least one project.

CMPS 453: Intro to Software Methodology

CMPS 455: Operating Systems

CMPS 460: Database Management Systems

 

k.       An ability to apply design and development principles in the construction of software systems of varying complexity

CMPS 453, 455, and 460 require students to implement complex software systems. CMPS 453 requires students to use software principles and design patterns. CMPS 455 requires students to work on at least one substantial project managing memory and demand-paging or implementing a file system. CMPS 460 requires students to use design and development principles of databases to implement a web-interfaced working system.

 

BS in Nursing

The scaffolding of courses is evident in the increased level of knowledge, performance expectations, and activities in the Clinical course sequence of the BS in Nursing (BSN) program. The curriculum for the pre-licensure BSN program includes both didactic and clinical components, and is based on the AACN Essentials of Baccalaureate Education for Professional Nursing Practice (2008). Didactic content for Nursing courses is delivered primarily face to face, although hybrid courses are offered on a limited basis. Students enrolled in the first three semesters of the Nursing program take pre-clinical courses and meet on campus throughout the semester in a classroom setting. During the second semester of the sophomore year, students apply for admission to the first clinical course. Upon clinical course admission, students begin to actively engage in practice activities, both in clinical settings and in the nationally accredited Simulation Labs located in Wharton Hall. Throughout the following five semesters, students proceed through courses in which content increases in complexity. Expectations also increase, as evidenced in clinical performance expectations and progressively more challenging simulation and patient care activities. This is illustrated in Table 9.1 – 3.

Table 9.1 – 3: Progressive and Systematic Learning Outcomes in Clinical Nursing Curriculum

Course

Clinical Performance Expectations Core Knowledge

Examples of Simulation Activities

Clinical Activities

NURS 208: Fundamentals of Caregiving

Second Semester, Sophomore

·         Incorporates knowledge from sciences, humanities, technology, growth and development, and nursing into a framework for professional nursing practice;

·         Recognizes and differentiates normal and abnormal assessment data;

·         Understands the relationship between observed data and physiological and pathological processes;

·         Integrates knowledge, skills, and values into nursing practice; and

·         Applies the nursing process in completion of the care-mapping process and adapts plan of care based on individual patient needs.                        

·         Basic Nursing Skills

·         Issues of Safety

·         Safe Use of Restraints

Students care for 1 patient for 3 hours/day, 1 day a week, providing basic care and administering a limited number of oral medications only.

NURS 308: Adult Health & Illness I

First Semester, Junior

·         Incorporates knowledge from sciences, humanities, technology, growth and development, and nursing into a framework for professional nursing practice;

·         Recognizes and differentiates normal and abnormal assessment data;

·         Incorporates observed data and physiological and pathological processes into patient care;

·         Integrates knowledge, skills, and values into nursing practice;

·         Applies the nursing process in completion of the care-mapping process, and adapts plan of care based on individual patient needs; and

·         Selects appropriate assessment techniques to determine individual and family needs.

·         Care of the Cardiac Patient with Congestive Heart Failure

·         Care of the Patient with GI Bleed

Students care for 1-2 patients for 2 full days each week on general medical/surgical units, administering all medications and providing total care.

NURS 340: Community and Psych/Mental Health Nursing

Second Semester, Junior

·         Incorporates knowledge from sciences, humanities, technology, growth and development, and nursing into a framework for professional nursing practice;

·         Utilizes a bio-psychosocial basis for differentiating normal and abnormal assessment data;

·         Incorporates observed data and physiological and pathological processes into patient care;

·         Applies knowledge, skills, and values from previous courses to the community and mental health setting;

·         Applies the nursing process using a holistic approach (mind, body, spirit) in caring for patients, families, and communities; and

·         Selects and utilizes appropriate assessment techniques to determine individual, group, and community needs.

·         Hearing Voices: Care of the Patient with Auditory Hallucinations

Students work in a specialty setting for the first time with groups of patients 2 days each week in the psychiatric setting and provide various population focused services to communities.

NURS 403: Childbearing Family, Child & Adolescent Health Care

First Semester, Senior

·         Incorporates knowledge from sciences, humanities, technology, growth and development, and nursing into a framework for professional nursing practice;

·         Utilizes a bio-psychosocial basis for differentiating normal and abnormal assessment data;

·         Incorporates observed data and physiological and pathological processes into patient care;

·         Applies knowledge, skills, and values from previous courses to the maternity and pediatric care setting;

·         Applies the nursing process using a holistic approach in caring for children and the child-bearing family; and

·         Selects and utilizes appropriate assessment techniques to determine individual and family needs.

·         Postpartum Hemorrhage

·         Asthma

·         Sickle Cell Crisis

Students care for 1-3 patients in Labor and Delivery, Postpartum, and Pediatric settings, acquiring an understanding of the needs of patients on these specialized units.

NURS 418: Adult Health & Illness II

Second Semester, Senior

·         Incorporates knowledge from sciences, humanities, technology, growth and development, and nursing into a framework for professional nursing practice;

·         Utilizes a bio-psychosocial basis for differentiating normal and abnormal assessment data;

·         Incorporates observed data, and physiological and pathological processes into patient care;

·         Applies knowledge, skills, and values from previous courses to the acute care setting;

·         Applies the nursing process using a holistic approach in caring for adults in the acute and/or critical care setting; and

·         Selects and utilizes appropriate assessment techniques to determine individual and family needs.

·         Code Blue, including EKG Interpretation and Cardiac Defibrillation

·         Trauma

·         Stages of Shock

Students are assigned to 3-4 acutely and critically ill patients in the hospital setting on units such as telemetry, ICU, ED, and ortho/neuro each day for 2 days each week, functioning in the full role of the registered nurse as they prepare for professional practice.

 

BS and Master’s in Architectural Studies

The BS in Architectural Studies is a 124-credit hour undergraduate degree program (non-accredited). The Master’s in Architecture is a 45-credit hour graduate program (accredited by the National Architecture Accrediting Board: NAAB). In both programs, the curricula exhibit coherence through the progressing complexity of design problems, and the increased integration of technical and professional considerations into the design problem. The primary course that Architecture students take each semester is the “Studio” — an active learning course in which students complete design projects and incorporate the information from support courses into their designs. These design projects serve to stimulate personal interest as a means to further investigation. The formulation of open-ended questions engages a heuristic process that encourages students to discover for themselves. A studio course is included in each semester of both degrees. The only topical studio occurs at the end of the undergraduate sequence. The Graduate Program re-engages the heuristic, personal, and process-driven thinking introduced in the first year. At the graduate level, the program continues to engage the students in a heuristic process that synthesizes acquired knowledge with the critical production of a project relevant to the profession.

The curriculum consists of a deliberate sequence of progressive and integrated experiences rather than a collection of discrete and detached increments. The faculty has developed an operational framework that determines the goals of each studio, and the interaction of the support courses with each studio. As students progress through the curricula, the studio projects, learning outcomes, evaluation criteria, and expected incorporation of outside information increase in complexity. This progressive advancement of work is illustrated in the chart “4 +1.5 Curriculum” in which the Studio Course and its corresponding Conceptual Framework, support courses, and thematic content are mapped.

The four years of the architectural undergraduate curriculum are structured in two parts; each contains semesters of overlap. The first part of the four-year undergraduate sequence is the foundation — a carefully orchestrated set of pivotal experiences that begin in the first year and conclude with entry into the third year. The second part of the four-year undergraduate sequence is identified as the professional development phase and is composed of a set of experiences that engages issues of practice. The graduate program is conceived as a synthesis of the two halves of the undergraduate program. Foundation and professional issues are revisited at a higher level of rigor. This scaffolding is illustrated in Table 9.1 – 4.

Table 9.1 – 4: Progressive and Systematic Learning Outcomes in Architecture Curriculum

Courses

Learning Outcome – Thematic Content

NAAB Performance Criteria met

Development/Foundation

 

Studio

DSGN 101: Basic Design I

DSGN 102: Basic Design II

ARCH 201: Architectural Design I

ARCH 202: Architectural Design II

 

Support Courses

DSGN 114: Design Communication

DSGN 121: Survey of Design

DSGN 235: Design and the Computer

ECON Elective

CMCN Elective

ENGL Elective

Discovery

·         Design Process

·         First Scaled Design

·         Site/Context

·         Small Building

 

Professional

 

Studio

ARCH 301: Architectural Design III

ARCH 302: Architectural Design IV

ARCH 401: Architectural Design V

ARCH 402: Architectural Design VI

 

Support Courses

ARCH 321: History of Architecture

ARCH 332: Building Systems I

ARCH 333: Building Systems II

ARCH 432: Building Systems III

ARCH 464: Professional Practice and Contract

 

Documents

ARCH 432: Building Systems III

CIVE 335: Structural Engineering I

CIVE 336: Structural Engineering II

Design Evidence, Competency

·         Medium Building

·         Large Building

·         Comprehensive Design

·         Topical Competition

Critical Thinking

·         Visual Communication

·         Fundamental Design

·         Ordering System

·         Culture Diversity

·         Applied Research

·         Tech Document

·         History, Tradition, & Global Culture

Technology

·         Pre-Design

·         Accessibility

·         Sustainability

·         Site Design

·         Life Safety

·         Structural Systems

·         Environmental System

·         Building Service

·         Comprehensive

·         Financial

·         Building Envelope

·         Materials

Leadership/Practice

·         Human Behavior

·         Practice Management

·         Legal Responsibility

Synthesis / Professional

 

Studio

ARCH 501: Advanced Architectural Design

ARCH 502: Advanced Architectural Design II

ARCH 509: Master’s Project

 

Support Courses

ARCH 521: Architectural History and Theory

ARCH 540: Architectural Practice

ARCH 521: Architectural History and Theory

ARCH 530: Urban Theory

ARCH 560: Theory in Architecture

 

Collaborative, Integrated Mastery

·         Integrated Design

·         Urban Design

·         Capstone

Critical Thinking

·         Communication

·         Design Thinking

·         Visual Communication

·         Investigate

·         Precedents

·         Fundamental Design

·         Culture Diversity

·         Applied Research

·         Tech Document

·         History, Tradition, & Global Culture

Technology

·         Pre-Design

·         Sustainability

·         Site Design

·         Financial

Leadership/Practice

·         Human Behavior

·         Practice Management

·         Legal

·         Responsibility

·         Collaboration

·         Client Role

·         Project Management

·         Leadership

·         Ethics

 

BA in Speech and Audio Pathology and MS in Speech Pathology and Audiology

The coherence of the curriculum of the Communicative Disorders (CODI) program is based on standards prescribed by the Council on Clinical Certification of the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association, which describes the knowledge and skills (competencies) that an applicant for certification must possess. Students applying for the Certificate of Clinical Competence (CCC) must have completed both an undergraduate pre-professional degree and a Master’s degree in Speech Language Pathology to be eligible for national certification, as well as a license to practice as a Speech Language Pathologist in Louisiana and in most states in the nation. The standards are sequential, insofar as the knowledge and skills covered in early standards must be acquired first, and then used to understand the knowledge and skills covered in later standards. The curriculum is designed across the Bachelor’s and Master’s programs in a comprehensive manner, so that lower-level courses address early standards while later courses include and build upon those foundational standards, yet also incorporate later standards. Thus, courses throughout the curriculum are designed to address specific standards in a sequential progression so that, as students advance through the curriculum, they are required to demonstrate increasing levels of integration and critical thinking. In addition, students receive information in didactic classes before being assigned clinical cases, so that they have the basic knowledge necessary to develop the clinical skills needed for therapeutic intervention. The learning objectives of the courses also demonstrate the progressive nature of the level of integration required of students at different levels. Learning objectives for undergraduate courses ask students to name, describe, and discuss topics and concepts, while objectives at the graduate level require that students compare, contrast, interpret, critique, and apply information to specific clinical cases.

The sequence of courses in the area of Language demonstrates these curricular principles and is illustrated in Table 9.1 – 5. The sequence of CODI BA and MS courses and their relation to learning outcomes are presented in Table 9.1 – 6.

Table 9.1 – 5: Sequence of Communicative Disorders Language courses

and corresponding American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA) Knowledge and Skills Acquisition (KASA) Standards

Courses

ASHA KASA Standards

CODI 275: Language Acquisition

CODI 384: Language Pathology in Children

III-B: The applicant must demonstrate knowledge of basic human communication and swallowing processes, including their biological, neurological, acoustic, psychological, developmental, and linguistic and cultural bases.

 

CODI 275: Language Acquisition

CODI 384: Language Pathology in Children

III-C: The applicant must demonstrate knowledge of the nature of speech, language, hearing, and communication disorders, and differences and swallowing disorders, including their etiologies, characteristics, anatomical/physiological, acoustic, psychological, developmental, and linguistic and cultural correlates. Specific knowledge must be demonstrated in the following areas (III-C, a-d):

a)       Receptive and expressive language (e.g., phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, and pragmatics) in speaking, listening, reading, writing, and manual modalities;

b)       Cognitive aspects of communication (e.g., attention, memory, sequencing, problem-solving, executive functioning);

c)       Social aspects of communication (e.g., challenging behavior, ineffective social skills, lack of communication opportunities); and

d)       Communication modalities (including oral, manual, augmentative, and alternative communication techniques, and assistive technologies).

CODI 384: Language Pathology in Children

III-D: The applicant must possess knowledge of the principles and methods of prevention, assessment, and intervention for people with communication disorders, including consideration of anatomical/physiological, psychological, developmental, and linguistic and cultural correlates of the disorders.

CODI 275: Language Acquisition

CODI 384: Language Pathology in Children

IV-G-3a: Students acquire knowledge regarding cultural and dialectal variability, and individual variation in communicative development, and learn strategies for effectively communicating with client/patient, family, caregivers, and relevant others.

 

CODI 526: Language Disorders in Children

IV-B: The applicant must possess skill in oral and written or other forms of communication sufficient for entry into professional practice.

IV-C: The applicant for certification in speech-language pathology must complete a minimum of 400 clock hours of supervised clinical experience in the practice of speech-language pathology. Twenty-five hours must be spent in clinical observation, and 375 hours must be spent in direct client/patient contact.

IV-D: At least 325 of the 400 clock hours must be completed while the applicant is engaged in graduate study in a program accredited in speech-language pathology by the Council on Academic Accreditation in Audiology and Speech-Language Pathology.

IV-E: Supervision must be provided by individuals who hold the Certificate of Clinical Competence in the appropriate area of practice. The amount of supervision must be appropriate to the student’s level of knowledge, experience, and competence. Supervision must be sufficient to ensure the welfare of the client/patient.

 

Table 9.1 – 6: Sequence of Communicative Disorders Language courses

and corresponding Learning Outcomes

Courses

Learning Outcomes

CODI 118: Intro to Communicative Disorders

CODI 384: Language Pathology in Children

1.       Demonstrate knowledge of the processes of normal development of communication

2.       Describe how the ability to communicate can be disrupted across the life span

3.       Name and describe specific disorders that can have a detrimental impact on the individual’s ability to communicate

4.       Discuss the impact of communication disorders on both the individual and his/her social environment

5.       Understand and discuss multicultural and multilingual issues as applied in the field of speech-language pathology and audiology

6.       Describe and discuss the roles and responsibilities of speech-language pathologists and audiologists to their clients, the profession, and the community

CODI 275: Language Acquisition

 

1.       Describe speech, language, and communication

2.       Explain components of language and theories underlying language acquisition/development

3.       Identify language, cognitive, social, and motor milestones of development

4.       Apply various indices measuring language development

5.       Recognize the influence of dialect and bilingualism (e.g., second-language learning).

CODI 526: Language Disorders in Children

1.       Compare, contrast, and discuss the relative advantages of a constructivist over a behaviorist framework of language and language disorders

2.       Discuss the cognitive, cultural, linguistic, and social variables that come into play when providing service delivery (including prevention, assessment and intervention) to students with or at risk for language impairment

3.       Collect authentic performance data that may be analyzed for assessment purposes from structural, as well as functional perspectives

4.       Identify, compare, and contrast various language assessment technologies, tools, and techniques available from language sciences and disorders

5.       Employ effective tools and techniques for the assessment of school-aged children with language disorders

6.       Conduct appropriate analysis of collected data by incorporating structural and functional analyses with academic, developmental, and diversity data

7.       Interpret the assessment findings in light of all collected data, and the social, academic, and cultural expectations set within the contexts of interest

8.       Employ language assessment data to plan effective and appropriate language, academic, and literacy intervention – including collaborations with teachers and parents for prevention and support activities

9.       Be able to critique and apply various types of materials and intervention techniques within school-based and community clinic settings in the remediation of language impairments among school-aged individuals while considering reimbursement and other contemporary professional issues

10.    Establish procedures to monitor the effectiveness and efficacy of the interventions employed for client’s benefit, as well as reimbursement, credentialing, and other contemporary professional issues

CODI 611: Advanced Topics in Language Sciences and Disorders

1.       Connect a constructivist theory of learning to narrative as a human construction of mind

2.       Describe the implications of narrative for organizing human experience

3.       Discuss the impact of cultural diversity on narrative construction

4.       Outline theoretical aspects of narrative as it relates to consciousness and identity

5.       Apply principles of narrative assessment and intervention to clinical populations

 

B. Educational programs are compatible with the stated mission and goals of the institution

All of UL Lafayette’s degree programs align with the University’s stated mission: “The University of Louisiana at Lafayette offers an exceptional education informed by diverse worldviews grounded in tradition, heritage, and culture. We develop leaders and innovators who advance knowledge, cultivate aesthetic sensibility, and improve the human condition.”

The University defines its mission and goals in the following statement from the Mission, Vision, Values: “We strive to create a community of leaders and innovators in an environment that fosters a desire to advance and disseminate knowledge.” It goes on,

We support the mission of the University by actualizing our core values:

·         Equity: striving for fair treatment and justice;

·         Integrity: demonstrating character, honesty, and trustworthiness;

·         Intellectual Curiosity: pursuing knowledge and appreciating its inherent value;

·         Creativity: transcending established ideas;

·         Tradition: acknowledging the contributions of the Acadian and Creole cultures to this region, and to our University’s history;

·         Transparency: practicing open communication and sharing information;

·         Respect: demonstrating empathy and esteem for others;

·         Collaboration: understanding our connection with others, and working to realize synergies through teamwork and collegiality;

·         Pluralism: believing in the inherent worth of diverse cultures and perspectives; and

·         Sustainability: making decisions and allocating resources to meet the needs of the present, while preserving resources for the future.

As defined by the Louisiana Board of Regents’ (BOR) Master Plan for Public Postsecondary Education in Louisiana (2011), UL Lafayette is a comprehensive university with a mission to educate undergraduate and graduate students in a variety of arts, sciences, and professional programs, and to conduct research in these fields. Admission to the University is selective, based on courses completed and academic performance.

By the BOR’s Role, Scope, and Mission Designations of Louisiana Institutions of Higher Education, UL Lafayette has a “statewide mission,” and is responsible for serving the following audiences:

1.       Residents from throughout Louisiana, especially those of the Acadiana region, who have excelled in high school studies, and are seeking an undergraduate or graduate degree or continuing professional education;

2.       Two-year college transfer students;

3.       Employers, both public and private – including school districts, health care providers, local governments, and private businesses and community agencies seeking technical assistance and applied research;

4.       Economic development interests and entrepreneurs throughout the state;

5.       Academic disciplines and the research community; and

6.       The community and region, by providing a broad range of academic and cultural activities, and public events.

In the same document, the BOR defines UL Lafayette’s array of programs and services in these terms:

1.       A broad range of bachelor’s and master’s-level core arts and sciences programs appropriate to a comprehensive, teaching, and research university;

2.       Undergraduate and graduate programs in the professional fields of architecture, computer science, education, engineering, criminal justice, nursing and allied health, and business;

3.       Support for area K-12 schools seeking college general education courses for advanced students; and assistance in ensuring that their graduates are college- and career-ready;

4.       Doctoral programs in a variety of arts, sciences and professional fields, including English, education, nursing, computer and systems engineering, mathematics, and environmental biology; and

5.       Services specifically designed to meet the economic development needs of the state.

All of the University’s degree programs, organized under eight academic colleges, are compatible with the aforementioned mission and goals. Among these programs, the University and the BOR recognize several areas as programmatic foci that contribute to UL Lafayette’s distinctive identity. The following list, albeit not all-inclusive, highlights targeted accomplishments aligned with the University’s mission:

·         Lifespan development with early childhood emphasis. Among others, degrees in this area include those in Psychology; Child and Family Studies; Sociology; Anthropology; the highly selective Speech Pathology and Audiology MA and PhD programs, which support a world-class research faculty whose achievements and publication record are unmatched in the state, as well as a clinic that serves as both a research center for students, and a public outreach arm of the program and the University; and a wide array of education programs, including the Master’s in Counselor Education, with concentrations in Mental Health Counseling and School Counseling, which operates the Clinic for Counseling and Personal Development (CCPD), and has served more than 500 members of the community over the span of more than 3,000 hours of free community service.

·         Louisiana arts, culture, and heritage programs and research, including a focus on Cajun and Creole cultural traditions. Among the programs in this area are History and Historic Preservation; Architecture; Fine Arts; Francophone Studies, one of only a handful in the country that covers literary, linguistic, and cultural issues of the entire French-speaking world; and the Traditional Music concentration, which focuses on regional cultures, and gives musicians an opportunity to improve their craft in styles such as Cajun, zydeco, and bluegrass, and has become an advocate for folk and traditional arts. 

·         Graduate and undergraduate programs in environment, energy, and economics. The degree programs in this area include Chemical Engineering, one of the top programs in the U.S. for alternative energy and green chemical production, and whose student team won the recent VerTec Green City competition in Belgium; Biology, which includes the state’s largest doctoral program in Environmental and Evolutionary Biology, is ranked among the top 121 Biology programs in federal R&D funding in the U.S. by National Science Foundation’s HERD Data Report, and is a leader in the field of Coastal Ecology; Petroleum Engineering, nationally recognized for resource management; and a strong cadre of business programs including the Professional Land and Resource Management program, which is one of 11 accredited programs in petroleum land management and/or energy management in the United States, and a strong Accounting program whose graduates regularly perform above state and national averages on two of the four sections of the CPA exam.

·         Graduate and undergraduate programs in nursing and health care systems and support. The MBA in Health Care Administration, the BS in Health Information Management, and the BS degree in Exercise Science, among others, join the UL Lafayette Nursing program, one of the largest in the country offering degrees from BSN through DNP, to provide degree programs in this area. At a stellar 95 percent, pass rates of UL Lafayette’s nursing graduates on the national licensure examination (the NCLEX-RN) are some of the highest in the country, and have consistently exceeded national and state pass rate averages for several decades.

·         Computing, informatics, and smart systems development. Programs in Systems Technology, Systems Engineering, and Informatics join the largest Computer Science program of its kind in the State to offer programs in this area. As the first MS program in Computer Science in the nation and the first Computer Science PhD program in the state, it has a long and distinguished history at UL Lafayette, and continues to produce a large number of graduates (approximately 100 degrees granted annually at the BS, MS, and PhD levels combined).

C. Educational programs are based upon fields of study appropriate for higher education

Degree programs at UL Lafayette are based upon types of academic programs appropriate to higher education because they:

·         are developed and approved by University faculty who hold content expertise in their respective fields;

·         are reviewed and approved by both the governing board, UL System Board of Supervisors (BOS) and the coordinating board, the BOR;

·         conform without exception to the description of the United States Department of Education’s (USDOE) Classification of Instructional Programs (CIP), a “taxonomic scheme that supports the accurate tracking and reporting of fields of study and program completions activity”; and

·         (whenever appropriate) meet the standards and expectations of individual accreditation agencies recognized by the USDOE.

Faculty members within a department or college initiate the creation of new programs by drafting a concise concept proposal that outlines the focus, structure, and necessity of the intended degree, and presenting it to the appropriate Dean. Upon the endorsement of the Dean of the college that will house the program, the faculty prepares a formal Letter of Intent, which is reviewed by the Assistant Vice President for Academic Affairs, then approved by the Provost and the President for submission to the BOS and to the BOR for review and approval. The Letter of Intent must address the need for the program, its curriculum structure, faculty qualifications, student demand and projected student enrollment, facilities, and required library, facilities, or equipment support. The approval process requires multiple stages: the Letter of Intent is first reviewed by the BOS, then, upon its recommendation, transmitted to the BOR for its own review and approval. Subsequently, a more detailed Full Proposal must be submitted to the same chain of scrutiny. Full Proposals must contain the following information, as per the Louisiana Board of Regents AA Policy 2.05:

 

·         DESCRIPTION should include the purpose of the program, as well as the curriculum, plus any prerequisite courses. Identify any incremental credentials that might be incorporated within the curriculum, concentrations, and/or approved electives. A reader should be able to describe what the program will accomplish for the completer, and how it will do it.

·         NEED/RELEVANCE is the argument for program approval. Address duplication or similarities with existing programs elsewhere, and explain why the proposed program is different and/or necessary.

·         STUDENTS should include a justification for projected enrollments and completers. If the new program is the expansion of an existing, successful concentration or minor, provide the existing curriculum and recent enrollment/completer data.

·         FACULTY should demonstrate preparation or a plan to offer the program, explaining how the program would be offered, whether/how existing faculty can absorb the new courses and students, and expected sources of additional faculty that would be needed.

·         LIBRARY, SPECIAL RESOURCES, FACILITIES, & EQUIPMENT describe what will be needed, and how and when the institution will acquire it. Costs for additional resources should be reflected in the budget.

·         ADMINISTRATION includes new directors, and anticipated timing of the administrative additions or changes.

·         ACCREDITATION should address any impact on, and plans to protect the institutions status with SACSCOC, as well as any relevant program requirements or recommendations in AcAf 2.13. If the institution will seek new or expanded accreditation, include an anticipated schedule of actions to be taken.

·         RELATED FIELDS summarizes how the proposed program “fits into” the institution’s existing offerings and strengths.

·         COSTS & REVENUE (BUDGET) should include new/additional costs referenced in the preceding text to show what new commitments the program would bring to the institution, and how they would be covered.

·         Factors that will be considered in assessing a proposed program include, but are not limited to, the following:

o    Relevance to the existing role, scope and, mission of the institution;

o    Contribution to the well-being of the state, region, or academy;

o    Program duplication (existing/related programs at other institutions); and

o    Institutional commitment to appropriately fund proposed program.

Because both the governing board (BOS) and the coordinating board (BOR) review all requests for new programs independently and in consecution, and because all proposed programs must correspond to a recognized CIP code, the approval process ensures that new programs are appropriate for higher education, are compatible with the role and scope of the proposing institution, that appropriate funding is available to support the programs, and that unnecessary program duplication within the State of Louisiana is avoided. In addition, the reviewing bodies require the input of an external reviewer—a faculty member at a peer or peer-plus institution who has established a national reputation in the relevant field of study and can assess the program’s conformity with best academic practices and current trends in the discipline. The external reviewer’s recommendation provides additional validation of the appropriateness of the program in the context of higher education.

In the case of separately accredited programs, accrediting agencies review the program’s conformity with accepted standards of appropriateness for higher education in the discipline. See Section 14.4 of this report for additional information on all accredited programs at UL Lafayette.

 

Supporting Documents

Architecture 4+1.5 Curriculum

Chemical Engineering Curriculum in Catalog

Chemical Engineering Flow Chart

CIP Website

Completed Course change form

Completed Course proposal

English Program in Catalog

General Education Program Core UL Lafayette

HERD Data Report

Informatics Evaluation

Master Plan for Public Postsecondary Education in Louisiana

Mission, Vision and Values statement

Report to the Graduate Council

Sample Letter of Intent

Section 9.3. General Education Requirements

Template for Program Proposals

UL Lafayette Catalog

Undergraduate Degree Requirements