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Throughout
their studies at the Tourism
College, undergraduate students
will have the chance to study
and do coursework in a great
diversity of courses and subjects.
These courses are highly varied
in their content area (hospitality,
tourism, business management,
practicum, languages); the skill
level which they impart (technical/professional,
supervisory, senior managerial);
and in the type of skills students
are expected to develop (decision-making,
interactive-communicative, analytical-critical,
conceptual mastery and proficiency).
While each course and subject
in the curriculum will have
its own blend of the above skill
elements (area, level, and type),
each is expected to be delivered
under the guidance of the following
principles of learning. |
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| 1. Learning should be enjoyable |
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Students should see their
classes as opportunities for interacting
and sharing. They are designed
such that each encounter between
a student and his or her instructor
and peers result in some identifiable
learning achievement, however
minor in the overall list of course
objectives. Students should view
their lessons not as a series
of assessments and examinations,
which is not to say that courses
should be less demanding or challenging.
Rather, each course is aimed so
that each learning encounter leads
to a positive mind-set among students,
which is essential to bolstering
an intrinsic motivation in achieving
the course learning objectives. |
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| 2. Learning should be active,
not passive |
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Courses are delivered in
such a manner that students are
given the opportunity to direct,
if not be the center of, class
discussion and not the instructor.
Debates, presentation of opposing
viewpoints, open-ended inquiries,
and agenda setting are the key
elements of engaging students
to become active learners. The
role of instructors is to moderate,
provoke discussion, and ensure
that dialog remains lively and
respectful. Learning activities
outside the classrooms are incorporated
in the : site visits, case histories,
guest lectures, |
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| 3. Students are expected to
learn how to learn |
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"Give a man a fish and
you feed him for a day; teach
a man how to fish and you feed
him for a lifetime." Courses
at the College are designed so
that students do not attain mere
content mastery but to become
insightful of what they are learning
and why, what else they need to
learn, and how they can learn
it. In other words, their courses
are meant to be only the beginning
or portal of a life-long learning
journey. In this regard, class
activities will be oriented toward
research, exploration and the
conduct of inquiry whereby students
are given the chance to set their
own learning agenda to some extent. |
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| 4. Students are expected to
collaborate with peers |
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Coursework at the College
are arranged such that a substantial
portion of the class activities
are devoted to group or team work.
While this is a common feature
in most collegiate level courses,
this is implemented one step further
at IFT by the use of joint Problem-Based
Learning approaches in several
courses of the curriculum. Group
work is also expected to be one
of collective responsibility and
not a mechanism for division of
labor. |
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| 5. Students are expected to
present, communicate, and assert |
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One hallmark of learned students
is that they gain confidence in
presenting, communicating, and
asserting their ideas and thoughts
before others. Courses at the
College expect students to attain
and demonstrate the necessary
communicative skills and confidence
to convey their ideas and engage
others in constructive dialogue
or discussion. |
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While not equally
applicable across the spectrum
of courses in the curriculum,
such principles articulated
above are expected to be adapted
to suit the conditions of each
course. Factors such as the
abilities and learning styles
of students, class sizes, and
curricular objectives are taken
into consideration. In general,
however, students are expected
to prepare themselves to perform
under the above methods of learning. |
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