WYOMISSING, Pa. — Two Penn State Berks professors are working to help students in STEM majors garner the core skills and knowledge offered in the humanities in an effort to gain a more complex understanding of how their disciplines and careers relate to humanity and the fast-paced global economy.
The professors were recently awarded a $350,000 “Cornerstone: Learning for Living” grant from the Teagle Foundation and the National Endowment for the Humanities to implement the Keystone Certificate, developed by the professors, at six additional Penn State campuses, including Abington, Behrend, Harrisburg, Lehigh Valley, Scranton, and University Park.
E. Michele Ramsey, associate professor of communication arts and sciences, and women’s, gender and sexuality studies, and Cheryl L. Nicholas, associate professor of communication arts and sciences and global studies, developed the Keystone Certificate for Penn State Berks with a planning grant from the same two organizations in 2021. The goal of the new grant is to create and implement distinct versions of the Keystone Certificate that are specific for each campus.
The Keystone Certificate includes two required courses — Humanities 101 and Humanities 102 — both of which engage students in the most important issues of the day through the study of transformative texts in the humanities. In addition, students can choose two additional courses, all of which meet general education requirements, from one of the certificate’s six pathways, which include science and technology, healthcare and medicine, globalization and culture, management and organizations, environment and sustainability, and conflict and justice.
In the Humanities 101 course, students engaged with Homer’s "The Odyssey" to learn about leadership, and then practiced creativity and collaboration skills through the construction of a board game based on the text. In another example, students in Humanities 102 studied the intersections of media, power, fascism, surveillance and politics in George Orwell’s "1984" and the intersections of politics, war, religion, sexism and racism in Candide’s "Voltaire" and applied these conversations to current political, social and economic contexts.
Ramsey and Nicholas will work with campus faculty to choose texts for their Humanities 101 and 102 courses, help them design the certificate so that it meets the needs of their individual campus, and create all the advising and promotional materials for each version of the certificate. The two professors will design the certificates so that students can earn them using general education requirements to provide the micro-credential opportunity, setting them apart from other graduates, without adding time to a student’s degree plans.