Transferable and Guided Skills (TAGS)
As students progress through their university experience, the transferable skills that they are learning across the entire curriculum will be recognized in the form of Transferable and Guided Skills (TAGS). Students will attain the following TAGS before graduating (a total of 10 TAGS).
Critical Reading (x2)
*One of the two Critical Reading TAGS is built into the Integrated Learning Communities.
Student Learning Outcomes:
- Utilize active reading strategies (via annotation, note taking, etc.) to aid comprehension and interpretation of texts
- Analyze texts using context appropriate approaches and lenses
- Identify texts within and across genres, disciplines/discourse communities, and rhetorical situations
- Use textual evidence to substantiate interpretations and arguments
- Recognize and reflect on ideologies presented within texts
Cultural and Linguistic Competencies
Student Learning Outcomes:
- Examine contemporary and/or historic culture(s) through lenses, which may include language, customs, beliefs, and/or contributions to global society
- Identify and analyze how culture influences values and perspectives with respect to specific issues
- Analyze how and why complexities of human diversity are socially and/or historically constructed
- Reflect on the interdependence of humanity, cultures, and environments
Equity and Inclusion
Student Learning Outcomes:
- Explain the differences between equality, equity, and fairness, and illustrate with specific examples
- Identify and reflect on personal biases in the context of the course
- Analyze the institutions and structures, both historical and current, that create and maintain inequalities and inequities among social groups
- Provide informed assessments of the impact of assumptions, judgments, and/or biases related to one’s own and other cultures
- Practice mutual respect for people, values, beliefs, and experiences that are different from one’s own
- Reflect on how advocacy has worked to remove barriers to inclusion
Ethical Deliberation
Student Learning Outcomes:
- Identify interconnections between ultimate questions, ethical issues, and/or moral dilemmas
- Demonstrate why these questions are of critical importance to individuals and to society
- Apply ethical principles, frameworks and theories to processes regarding formation of identity, individual and social values, and/or decision making
- Critically evaluate and reflect on ethical and/or moral frameworks
Information and Digital Literacy
*This TAGS is built into the Integrated Learning Communities.
Student Learning Outcomes:
- Articulate key elements in research questions to develop and execute a search strategy
- Investigate differing viewpoints encountered in strategic exploration of topics to develop informed arguments or hypotheses
- Recognize and evaluate diverse sources of information and use suitable resources appropriately for information needs
- Distinguish between personal ideas and the intellectual property of others to ethically use information and demonstrate academic integrity
- Communicate ideas responsibly in a variety of genres and digital media
- Reflect on one's role and responsibility in communicating and creating knowledge
Public Speaking
Student Learning Outcomes:
- Develop skills to organize presentations effectively and deliver a central message
- Use evidence and supporting material to support the central message
- Examine various effective strategies and delivery techniques
- Use language, delivery style, and medium appropriate to the material and the setting
- Reflect on public speaking goals and self-assess public speaking abilities
Quantitative Reasoning
Student Learning Outcomes:
- Interpret and explain numerical data represented in various forms (e.g. words, equations, graphs, diagrams, tables, models)
- Assess and communicate assumptions and limitations of numerical data
- Communicate numerical data in various mathematical forms (e.g. words, equations, graphs, diagrams, tables, models)
- Use or evaluate the use of numerical data in support or opposition to an assertion or argument
Writing (x2)
*One of the two Writing TAGS is built into the Integrated Learning Communities.
Student Learning Outcomes:
- Communicate effectively in scholarly, creative, public, and/or professional writing situations
- Recognize and be responsive to rhetorical situations
- Incorporate relevant and credible sources and attribute ethically for a given context
- Revise writing using self-assessment and feedback
- Reflect on process choices and conceptual knowledge of writing
Any course at the university can have up to two TAGS, including courses contributing to any major/minor or those that are otherwise components of MILE. Consult É«ÖÐɫ’s course catalog for information about what TAGS are associated with a course.