ABSTRACT

This book explores how college students address life challenges and develop the self-authoring capacities needed to deal with the ambiguities and complexities of life after graduation.

Based on the in-depth interview portion of the Wabash National Study of Liberal Arts Education, this book draws on almost 1,000 interviews with a diverse cohort of 315 students from six institutions over 4 years. It traces these students’ journeys, documenting the wide variety of pathways they followed, the range of contexts in which their experiences took place, the liberal education outcomes associated with these experiences, and the factors that affected quality and impact. The authors critique current student development theory and offer a new interactionist model to guide future study in the field, inviting readers to adopt five habits of mind to guide their praxis and practice to promote student development.

This valuable resource is written for educators working in higher education institutions – both faculty and student affairs professionals – who want to help students get the most out of their college experience.

chapter 2|22 pages

A More Nuanced Portrayal of Self-Evolution

The Ten-Position Model of Self-Authorship Development

chapter 4|10 pages

Research Methods for the Interview Portion of the Wabash National Study

Procedures, Choices, and Lessons Learned

chapter 5|21 pages

Where Do Experiences That Are Important to Students Happen?

Exploring Contexts of Experiences Reported in the Wabash National Study

chapter 8|29 pages

What Experiences Promote the Development of Self-Authorship?

Exploring Patterns in Developmentally Effective Experiences

chapter 9|29 pages

Weaving the Threads of Learning

Examining Student Experiences With the WNS Liberal Arts Outcomes

chapter 10|20 pages

Implications and Invitations

How Can Educators Help Students Learn to Author Their Lives?