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I became a full-time faculty member at Beaver College in 1970. Over this time, I have taught thousands of students in various health and science courses. I recently met an alum from my earliest years of teaching, who remembered a principle from an introductory psychology course that had influenced his thinking and work as a physician: “Positive reinforcement is a very effective method for changing behavior.”
Advising is an equally important aspect of being a faculty member in higher education, and I would venture to say that I have mentored approximately 500 students. During our meetings, we discussed their plans for graduate work, changing majors, integrating an art major with psychology, and the overarching struggle to find life lessons in their field of study. Some students needed only a signature and a quick check of their registration form, while others enjoyed more substantive interaction.
This is a wonderful contrast to later memories of students who brought their children to Arcadia so that they would not miss class. An alumna once told me that she entered a doctoral program in psychology because, to her, I showed that she did not have to choose between family life and an academic career.
As a fairly new faculty member, I was in awe as Beaver College discussed the controversial decision to shift from a woman’s college to a co-educational institution. While in a faculty meeting, I saw a sign lowered from the floor above the Rose Room that read, “Hell no, we won’t go.” The women living in the Castle had decorated that sign with bras. The sign caused quite a stir before it was quickly retrieved back. (Oh, for a cell phone at that moment.) Where are you now, women from that period, protesting so vividly?
Another dominant reflection for me involves the collegiality of the faculty. I was married to a college professor at another university, so I knew that interdisciplinary conversations were a special characteristic of Beaver College. As the university grew, the close-knit nature of Arcadia’s faculty fostered a climate that made the birth of “Writing Across the Curriculum” possible.
This area of my scholarship, and the resulting curriculum changes, are enduring signs of a productive career intertwined with university growth and change. That same collegial atmosphere has spawned University Seminars in which faculty from two disparate disciplines create novel syllabi for students who are interested in multiple subjects.
As Dr. John Hoffman moves from his specialty in biology to the provost’s position, I believe that the traditions of faculty collegiality and looking back at our heritage will continue to carry us forward as we prepare future generations of students for success after graduation.