The Preparation of Stewards with the Mastery Rubric for Stewardship: Re-Envisioning the Formation of Scholars and Practitioners
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Who is A Steward of the Discipline?
1.2. A Developmental Path for Stewardship
- (1).
- A list of knowledge, skills and abilities (KSAs) to be developed by learners via the curriculum in order for progress towards expertise (or independence) to be attained;
- (2).
- Conceptualization of the trajectory of progression from novice to the desired (targeted) level(s) of expertise or independence, and ideas of the evidence supporting claims of classification; and
- (3).
- Descriptions of two or more mutually exclusive performance levels (e.g., novice, proficient) on each of the list of KSAs.
2. Methods
2.1. KSA Identification
2.2. Trajectory Articulation
2.3. Performance Level Descriptors
- (1).
- What is/are the knowledge, skills, and abilities (KSAs) that students should possess at the end (or a given stage) of the curriculum?
- (2).
- What actions/behaviors by the students will reveal these KSAs?
- (3).
- What tasks will elicit these specific actions or behaviors?
2.4. Validity Evidence
3. Results
3.1. Results: Identification of KSAs
- Requisite knowledge/situational awareness
- Create and/or generate new methods/new knowledge
- Critically evaluate extant and emerging ideas
- Conserve ideas (or not, if deemed rejectable and non-conservation is justified)
- Responsibly write (disciplinary scholarship)
- Responsibly teach/mentor/model (formally and informally)
- Responsibly apply the knowledge and principles of the discipline
- Responsibly communicate (outside of scholarly venues)
3.2. Results: Trajectory definition
3.3. Results: Performance Level Descriptors (PLDs)
3.4. Results: Validity Evidence for KSAs of the MR-S
- (1).
- Critical dialogue: Historians engage in a complex process of exploring “former lives and worlds in search of answers to the most compelling questions of our own time and place”. This process takes place through “reasoned discourse” within “communities governed by mutual respect and constructive criticism”.
- (2).
- Trust and respect: Historians must maintain the trust and respect of readers, both academic and public.
- (3).
- Maintain integrity of the historical record: Related to the need to maintain trust with the readers is the need to guard the integrity of the historical record. This involves a commitment to not invent, alter, remove, or destroy evidence of any kind, as well as to maintaining the distinction between primary and secondary sources and leaving a clear trail in regards to their use to their use of primary sources and the consistent use of scholarly bibliographies and annotations.
- (4).
- Acknowledging debts: Trust is also maintained by the proper acknowledgment of one’s debts, whether intellectual, financial, or otherwise. This includes avoiding any form of plagiarism, an act of the most serious ethical and professional misconduct. It also includes acknowledging assistance from colleagues, students, or collaborators and or other circumstantial privileges, such as being given special access to material.
- (5).
- Forming points of view: Among the most basic tasks for historians is the need to form points of view that argue for a “particular, limited perspective on the past”. Historians strive to make sense of the past with the recognition that “all knowledge is situated in time and place, that all interpretations express a point of view, and that no mortal mind can ever aspire to omniscience. Because the record of the past is so fragmentary, absolute historical knowledge is denied us.”
- (6).
- Valuing multiple and conflicting perspectives: At the same time that historians form and defend particular points of view about the past, they also recognize and value differing historical perspectives. This does not mean that all interpretations are equally valid. It means that historians recognize that a final interpretation is impossible—“no single objective or universal account [of the past] could ever put an end to this endless creative dialogue within and between the past and the present”.
- (7).
- Recognize personal bias and commit to follow evidence: Points of view are often shaped by historians’ own personal views and biases, thus historians should remain aware of their own biases and commit to following “sound method and analysis wherever they may lead”.
- (1).
- The integrity of the scientific mission is a collective responsibility. SfN members and those who contribute to SfN activities and publications are expected to conduct science in a responsible and ethical manner. The institutions at which scientific work is carried out are responsible for ensuring ethical standards are followed. SfN has a special responsibility regarding those scientific activities for which it is directly responsible, including publication of The Journal of Neuroscience, eNeuro, and presentations at the annual meeting. Investigators are responsible for the accuracy of information reported in published articles and abstracts, for insuring that authorship is appropriate, for avoiding plagiarism and duplicate publication, and for insuring the ethical treatment of animals and human subjects. Journal editors and reviewers are responsible for providing a fair, objective, and timely process for reviewing submitted manuscripts.
- (2).
- Data must be original and accurate. It is essential that researchers and others be able to trust the validity of published data. That trust permits researchers to build on prior observations and thus facilitates the progress of science. Replication and extension of published results allows science to move forward and often entails free sharing of research material. While scientific errors and differences of interpretation are natural aspects of the creative process, data that have been fabricated or falsified contaminate the scientific literature, greatly diminishing its value for researchers and others in the community. Moreover, such fraudulent actions undermine society’s trust in the scientific enterprise.
- (3).
- Priority of data and ideas must be respected. Scientific publication is an important part of the process by which priority is established for experimental work and research ideas. Plagiarism—the presentation of other investigator’s data or ideas as your own—is unacceptable. Duplication of text or data (including figures, tables, or portions thereof) previously published by others or presentation of ideas or experimental findings of others must be accompanied by citation of the previous work.
- (4).
- Authorship should reflect a significant intellectual contribution. Each author should have made a significant intellectual contribution to the conception, design, conduct, analysis, and/or interpretation of the scientific work. Each individual meeting this criterion should be offered the opportunity to participate in authoring, drafting, or critically reviewing the manuscript.
- (5).
- Original data should only be published once. Reporting the same finding based on the same data in separate publications without explicit acknowledgement of the relationship constitutes duplicate publication and is unacceptable.
- (6).
- Every author shares responsibility. All authors share responsibility for the scientific accuracy of an abstract or manuscript, including supplementary material. Hence, in cases of fabrication, falsification, or plagiarism, all authors are potentially culpable.
- (7).
- Conflict of interest must be declared. Authors are responsible for declaring any conflict of interest or appearance thereof that is relevant to a manuscript, abstract, or presentation. Everyone involved in peer review should declare any conflict of interest or appearance thereof and avoid any inappropriate conflict of interest.
- (8).
- Pre-published material is confidential. Reviewers and editors must avoid breach of confidentiality or using confidential information to advance their own or someone else’s research or financial interests.
- (9).
- Research using animals and human subjects must be conducted ethically. Research using laboratory animals or human subjects must be done humanely and in accordance with institutional and governmental regulations.
4. Discussion
- The cognitive task analysis extracted additional dimensions (KSAs) beyond the original definition of stewardship (generation, conservation, transformation), and eight different features (KSAs) of stewardship that are each learnable and improvable were articulated so that each maintained the essence of the construct. Thus, the construct itself is conserved, and each dimension is rendered learnable, improvable, and observable.
- PLDs were formalized to capture a variety of ways that stewardship can evolve organically across different disciplines and throughout a career. They are also general enough so that any KSA at any stage can be demonstrated within and outside of academia, and across fields. Consistent with the original intent of the construct, these PLDs enable any professional or practitioner to demonstrate their stewardship.
- PLDs recognize that the journeyman steward may have opportunities to teach, mentor, and model stewardly behaviors, but that specific successes in these activities are concretely demonstrated by the Master. Outside of an academic setting, journeyman stewards can demonstrate their achievement of the master level with the same kinds of evidence as instructors, even if they are derived from non-academic activities, from working with their mentees/junior collaborators. This explicitly supports the development of stewardship in professional settings (outside of academia).
- There is no KSA for “ethical practice” because the entire stewardship model implicitly reflects a virtue ethics approach to professional conduct and identity. The focus in the MR-S is on taking, and demonstrating, responsibility in the dimensions of stewardly practice, enabling ethical practice even if there are no/no specific ethical practice guidelines available.
4.1. Development of the Stewardly KSAs
4.2. Documenting Teaching and Learning
4.3. Limitations of this Project
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Bloom’s Taxonomy
- (1).
- Remember/Reiterate—performance based on recognition of a seen example.
- (2).
- Understand/Summarize—performance summarizes information already known/given.
- (3).
- Apply/Illustrate—performance extrapolates from seen examples to new examples by applying rules.
- (4).
- Analyze/Predict—performance requires analysis and prediction, using rules.
- (5).
- Create/ Synthesize—performance yields something innovative and novel, creating, describing and justifying something new from existing things/ideas.
- (6).
- Evaluate/Compare/Judge—performance involves the application of guidelines, not rules, and can involve subtle differences arising from comparison or evaluation of abstract, theoretical or otherwise not-rule-based decisions, ideas or materials.
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Developmental stage/ performance level of stewardship Stewardship KSAs | Novice | Apprentice | Journeyman | Master |
---|---|---|---|---|
General descriptor of performance: | Has interest but limited experience in the discipline or profession, but is being introduced to the ideas and commitments that the Apprentice will build upon. Is discovering the importance of disciplinary and professional stewardship. | Actively engaged in study of the discipline and seeks opportunities to demonstrate and grow the KSAs. Developing the full range of Bloom’s cognitive abilities, a greater awareness of their own limitations, and a commitment to professional and disciplinary stewardship. | Demonstrates the KSAs and commitments of a steward of the discipline, including preserving disciplinary integrity. Is engaged in a disciplinary or professional community, and seeks additional opportunities to reinforce less-well developed skills. | An expert in the KSAs and someone to whom apprenticeship in stewardship can be entrusted. Formatively diagnoses and remediates the performance of KSAs, and develops and evaluates summative assessments for specific KSAs in support of stewardly development through the master level. |
Requisite knowledge/ situational awareness | Largely unaware of the professional community and standards within which their academic or professional interests operate. | Learning to recognize when and how to demonstrate stewardship, that professional standards of practice involve both legal/illegal and ethical/unethical continua, and how to recognize and respond to these features. | Exercises professional practice standards and recognizes situations in which stewardship should be modeled and/or applied with respect to themselves and others, and to interactions within and outside of the profession or discipline. | Models, promotes, and teaches recognition of situations in which stewardship can and should be demonstrated; identifies strategies for how best to proceed when it is not clear. |
Create and/or generate new methods/new knowledge | Has limited awareness of the knowledge and activities of the discipline, and limited exposure to the ethical issues involved in their creation and use. Learning that knowledge is generated; and that the creation of new methods or knowledge may have ramifications beyond the original intent. | Learning to create methods and knowledge in a manner that strengthens and advances the field and disciplinary community. Developing the ability to recognize when new methods or knowledge can be used for unethical ends, and how stewards of the discipline respond. Learning how to balance a commitment to strengthen and advance the discipline with advancing one’s career | Generates, and transparently communicates, new methods and knowledge to strengthen and advance the field. Considers how new ideas can be used for unethical ends, and models how to respond when such action occurs. Prioritizes the disciplinary community over metrics that devalue it. Challenges such metrics whenever possible. | Models, promotes, and teaches stewards to recognize and exhibit their responsibilities to the disciplinary community and society as they create and/or generate new methods and knowledge. Promotes transparency in the documentation of the new knowledge/methods to others in the disciplinary community and those outside it. Supports systems for professional assessment and developmental milestones for themselves, their mentees/trainees, and others in the community that are consistent with stewardly responsibilities. |
Critically evaluate extant and emerging ideas | Limited ability to evaluate ideas or differentiate between assertions and arguments within the discipline. Uncritically treats vetted ideas and materials as “true”. Learning how warrants and claims function together to form arguments and evidence-based reasoning. | Learning how professionals review, critique, and challenge each other’s ideas and arguments. Practicing these skills through guided work with increasing levels of disciplinary engagement and independence. Developing the intellectual humility necessary to critically evaluate their work according to disciplinary standards. | Critically evaluates knowledge and ideas within the discipline or profession and the paradigms by which this knowledge is derived, and promotes this evaluation by others. Participates in the vetting of new and emerging ideas within the profession or discipline. Exhibits intellectual humility and ensures their contributions to the field are well-reasoned and well-supported. | Models, promotes, and teaches critical thinking. Trains stewards in intellectual humility and the critical evaluation (vetting) of extant and emerging ideas, including their own work and the work of others both in and outside of their own discipline. |
Conserve ideas (or rejects ideas if non-conservation is justified) | Entering the field by learning about the fundamental ideas, thinkers, and accomplishments of the past. Attention is focused on remembering and understanding core (highly conserved) ideas; justifies neither their conservation nor rejection of ideas or arguments. | Learning to conserve fundamental ideas of the field through engagement, application, relation, and extension, as well as qualification and critique. Learning to recognize processes by which ideas in the field are vetted and that re-evaluation and conservation are essential to the integrity of the field. Learning to describe and justify decisions about conservation or non-conservation. Learning how these decisions have shaped the history of the field and the ideas that are/have been conserved. | Critically conserves the ideas that advance the field and preserve its integrity. Recognizes multiple perspectives, including cultural and extra-disciplinary influences, in describing and justifying decisions of conservation or non-conservation of ideas, models, and views. Recognizes their role in shaping the field/ profession and its history. | Trains stewards to recognize, understand, and critically evaluate the vetting that ideas in the field have/have had, including the influence of cultural and extra-disciplinary forces. Models, promotes, and teaches that conservation or non-conservation of ideas in the discipline or profession must be justified, and how to do so. Strives to instill in others, both in and outside of their own discipline, an understanding of the dynamics of the evolution of the field. Participates in the conservation, non-conservation, or rejection of ideas through teaching or training and enabling others to do so. |
Responsibly write | Learning disciplinary writing standards with attention to the details of what must be recorded, how to construct written reports, and why responsible writing requires transparency. | Gaining greater proficiency in discipline-specific writing. Demonstrating increased sophistication in writing, including content, rhetoric and argumentation, and transparency and professional integrity. | Independently writes in the diversity of contexts and styles specific to the field, to generate, conserve, challenge, and reject field-specific knowledge and to engage others in and outside the field. Practices and promotes transparency in their writing for the sake of the discipline and field. | Trains stewards in the importance and execution of transparent, complete, and appropriate—responsible—writing within the field. May also train stewards in cross-disciplinary writing, and in writing for readers outside the discipline. |
Responsibly teach/mentor/model | As someone uninitiated in the field, the Novice does not undertake teaching or mentoring roles. | Growing in disciplinary knowledge, skills, and abilities and the ability to pass these on to others. Develops an understanding of the importance of competent mentoring and modeling inherent in professional practice and disciplinary responsibilities. Seeks opportunities to learn about workplace appropriate teaching and learning, and to practice teaching, with supervision if available. | Possess the knowledge, skills, and abilities of the discipline and is able to pass these along to others. Teaches, mentors, and models professionalism and the commitments of stewardship in both formal and informal settings, within and outside the field. | The Master steward teaches others to teach, model, and mentor professionalism and stewardship. * |
Responsibly apply disciplinary knowledge | As someone inexperienced in the KSAs of the field, the Novice is not expected to apply them but is learning that application entails responsibilities for the practitioner. | Learning how and when to apply the KSAs of the discipline and how application entails professional and ethical responsibilities, including integrity, transparency, and respect. Seeks opportunities to deepen their knowledge of their professional and ethical responsibilities. | Applies the KSAs in a way that preserves and advances the field by demonstrating integrity, transparency, and respect in interactions within and outside of the profession or discipline. | Trains stewards to responsibly apply disciplinary knowledge within and outside of the professional or discipline. Teaches, models, and promotes the recognition and acceptance of the responsibility that accrues to those who practice in the discipline or profession. |
Responsibly communicate | Discovering the rules for communicating in the discipline or profession. Learning that stewards of the discipline have a responsibility to represent their field to others in a way that promotes the integrity, transparency, and respect of their profession. | Learning how and when to communicate with insiders and outsiders about their discipline or profession. Recognizes that communicating as a steward imparts responsibilities that include demonstrating integrity, transparency, and respect, and seeks to exhibit their commitment to these responsibilities. | Clearly and effectively communicates the ideas, perspectives, and content of the discipline to insiders and outsiders in a way that promotes integrity, transparency, and respect. | Trains stewards to communicate responsibly across modalities and audiences. Teaches, models, and promotes the acceptance of the responsibility that accrues to those who communicate about the discipline or profession, or its results. |
AHA Guideline Principle: MR-S KSAs: | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | ALIGNMENT |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Requisite Knowledge/ situational awareness | * | * | * | * | 4 | |||
Create and/or generate new methods/new knowledge | * | * | * | 3 | ||||
Critically evaluate extant knowledge | * | * | * | 3 | ||||
Conserve ideas (or not, if deemed rejectable and non-conservation is justified) | * | * | * | * | 4 | |||
Responsibly write | * | * | * | * | * | * | 6 | |
Responsibly apply disciplinary knowledge | * | * | * | * | 4 | |||
Responsibly communicate | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | 7 |
Responsibly teach/mentor/model | * | * | * | * | * | 5 | ||
ALIGNMENT | 6 | 4 | 5 | 5 | 6 | 5 | 5 |
ASA Guideline: Stewardship KSAs: | A | B | C | D | E | F | G | ALIGNMENT |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Requisite knowledge/situational awareness | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | 7 |
Create and/or generate new methods/new knowledge | * | * | * | 3 | ||||
Critically evaluate extant knowledge | * | * | * | * | * | * | 6 | |
Conserve ideas (or not, if deemed rejectable and non-conservation is justified) | * | * | * | * | * | 5 | ||
Responsibly write | * | * | * | 3 | ||||
Responsibly apply disciplinary knowledge | * | * | * | * | * | * | 6 | |
Responsibly communicate | * | * | * | * | * | * | 6 | |
Responsibly teach/mentor/model | * | * | * | * | 4 | |||
ALIGNMENT | 6 | 6 | 5 | 5 | 7 | 7 | 4 |
Neuroscience Guideline: Stewardship KSAs: | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | ALIGNMENT |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Requisite knowledge /situational awareness | * | * | * | * | * | 5 | ||||
Create and/or generate new methods/new knowledge | * | * | * | * | * | * | 6 | |||
Critically evaluate extant knowledge | * | * | * | * | 4 | |||||
Conserve ideas (or not, if deemed rejectable and non-conservation is justified) | * | * | * | 3 | ||||||
Responsibly write | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | 8 | |
Responsibly apply disciplinary knowledge | * | * | * | * | * | 5 | ||||
Responsibly communicate | * | * | * | * | * | * | 6 | |||
Responsibly teach/mentor/model | * | * | 2 | |||||||
ALIGNMENT | 5 | 4 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 7 | 5 | 2 | 4 |
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Rios, C.M.; Golde, C.M.; Tractenberg, R.E. The Preparation of Stewards with the Mastery Rubric for Stewardship: Re-Envisioning the Formation of Scholars and Practitioners. Educ. Sci. 2019, 9, 292. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci9040292
Rios CM, Golde CM, Tractenberg RE. The Preparation of Stewards with the Mastery Rubric for Stewardship: Re-Envisioning the Formation of Scholars and Practitioners. Education Sciences. 2019; 9(4):292. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci9040292
Chicago/Turabian StyleRios, Christopher M., Chris M. Golde, and Rochelle E. Tractenberg. 2019. "The Preparation of Stewards with the Mastery Rubric for Stewardship: Re-Envisioning the Formation of Scholars and Practitioners" Education Sciences 9, no. 4: 292. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci9040292