Human Resource Management
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IND 299 Final Project Guidelines and Rubric
Overview In this course, you will explore the value of the Bachelor of Arts in General Studies (BA.GST) degree and how the vast knowledge gained in this diverse educational program gives you an innovative edge professionally, personally, and for civic engagement. As you prepare for your future beyond this degree, it is crucial that you be able to articulate, in a professional manner, how your experience has prepared you for the opportunities you seek. To help you practice the skill of formally defending your experiences, skills, and goals, you will create an academic plan of study for the final project in this course. In this document, you will have the opportunity to illustrate your personally designed strategic plan for achieving your goals and earning a BA.GST degree.
Your academic plan of study will begin with developing a SMART goal statement that communicates the knowledge and skills you will attain to support the achievement of your goal. Next, you will defend your concentration and consider enduring skills that support the completion of your goal statement. You will then compile a comprehensive list of the completed and planned coursework required to earn your degree by the anticipated graduation date. Finally, you will present an extended rationale for your goal and the steps you have outlined to reach that goal. Your perceived professionalism as you present your academic plan is just as important as the content of what you say. Be sure that you cleanly and professionally format your plan and check your document for any spelling and grammar errors.
The project is divided into three milestones, which will be submitted at various points throughout the course to scaffold learning and ensure quality final submissions. These milestones will be submitted in Modules Two, Three, and Five. The final product will be submitted in Module Seven. In this assignment, you will demonstrate your mastery of the following course outcomes:
Illustrate the applicability of academic learning by explaining its connections and value to personal and professional planning
Utilize relevant research in explaining how strengths and weaknesses can be leveraged to achieve personal and professional goals
Employ fundamental writing skills in articulating plans of study appropriate for academic and professional audiences
Apply fundamental goal principles and strategic planning techniques in supporting feasible plans of academic study
Prompt Create an academic plan of study that will explain and support your intention to earn a Bachelor of Arts in General Studies degree. Begin by forming an achievable goal statement. Then, discuss your prior experiences and planned academic learning and how you can use your achieved knowledge and skills to direct your educational and professional goals. Finally, build a case for your plan of study by articulating its value to you moving forward. Remember that this is a formal, professional document that must be formatted and presented in a manner appropriate for academic and professional audiences.
Specifically, the following critical elements must be addressed:
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I. Goal Statement: In this section, you will introduce the career and/or personal goals related to achieving your BA.GST degree. You will do this in a brief goal statement (one to two paragraphs). You will then develop a SMART goal related to your academic plan of study. Remember that your introduction needs to establish the basis of your decisions for your audience.
a) Concisely introduce your academic plan of study with a goal statement that details your career and/or personal goals in a manner appropriate for academic and professional audiences.
b) Develop a SMART goal related to your academic plan of study.
II. Enduring Skills: In this section, you will connect your academic learning to specific enduring skills to determine the value of this knowledge and how it can be applied to your goal statement. Enduring skills refer to skills that will benefit you throughout your lifetime both in your professional life and in your personal life beyond the workplace.
a) Identify three enduring skills that define any aspect of your prior or planned academic learning related to your SMART goal in Milestone One.
b) Explain how any prior or planned academic learning relates to personal strengths and weaknesses. Be sure to refer to the specific enduring skills you are developing. Support your response using research.
c) What additional learning, courses, or research do you feel you could use to expand on your skills? How will this academic learning connect to your unique pathway and goal statement? Be sure to address why this knowledge is valuable to your goals and how will it help you plan your future.
III. Concentration: To complete this section, you will need to choose a concentration in the General Studies program using the provided list and then research what knowledge, skills, and abilities you will need to complete this concentration.
a) Defend the concentration you have chosen based on how it will help you achieve your personal or professional goals. Be sure to reference the knowledge you plan to gain in the concentration.
b) Back up your assertions with research that supports your concentration choice.
IV. Coursework: In this section, you will think about your enduring skills and your concentration in relation to your goal, and you will plan out the coursework for your entire degree program. This should be a specific and detailed outline of the number of credits needed, the courses needed at each level (200-level, 300-level, etc.), the courses you have already completed, and so on.
a) Provide an organized list of your degree requirements and your completed and planned coursework. Be sure to organize courses according to your program evaluation.
b) Provide a brief annotation (one to two sentences) of each listed course, illustrating why the course is applicable to your personal or professional goals.
Note: All students are expected to review the academic catalog for prerequisite courses that are required as part of their program. All courses and their prerequisites must be program applicable for financial aid purposes.
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V. Academic Rationale: In this section, you will articulate the value of the BA.GST degree using research and specific examples to illustrate the benefits
of completing this degree plan. a) Discuss the larger relevance of the General Studies degree to achieving your goals. Be sure to address the benefits of your General Studies
degree and the value of a diverse education to achieving your future goals. b) Incorporate research (e.g., course resources, scholarly articles, networking sites, webinar opportunities) that will support you in achieving
your goals.
Milestones Milestone One: SMART Goal In Module Two, you will introduce the career goals and personal goals that are related to achieving your BA.GST degree. This milestone will be graded with the Milestone One Rubric. Milestone Two: Enduring Skills In Module Three, you will connect your academic learning to specific enduring skills to determine the value of this knowledge and how it can be applied to your goal statement. This milestone will be graded with the Milestone Two Rubric. Milestone Three: Coursework and Concentration In Module Five, you will select the concentration for your academic plan of study, as well as plan out the remaining coursework for your degree program. This milestone will be graded with the Milestone Three Rubric. ACTION: If you have not already done so, be sure to declare your concentration by completing the Undergraduate Program Modification form by the end of Module Five. Final Submission: Academic Plan of Study In Module Seven, you will submit your final project. It should be a complete, polished artifact containing all of the critical elements of the final product. It should reflect the incorporation of feedback gained throughout the course. This submission will be graded with the Final Project Rubric.
Deliverables Milestone Deliverable Module Due Grading
One SMART Goal Two Graded separately; Milestone One Rubric
Two Enduring Skills Three Graded separately; Milestone Two Rubric
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Milestone Deliverable Module Due Grading
Three Coursework and Concentration Five Graded separately; Milestone Three Rubric
Final Submission: Academic Plan of Study Seven Graded separately; Final Project Rubric
Final Project Rubric Guidelines for Submission: Your academic plan of study must be 6–8 pages in length (plus a cover page and references) and written in APA format. Use double spacing, 12-point Times New Roman font, and one-inch margins. Include at least three references cited in APA format.
Critical Elements Exemplary (100%) Proficient (85%) Needs Improvement (55%) Not Evident (0%) Value Goal Statement: Goal
Statement Meets “Proficient” criteria and demonstrates sophisticated ability to detail career and/or personal goals in a manner appropriate for academic and professional audiences
Concisely introduces the academic plan of study with a goal statement that details career and/or personal goals written in a manner appropriate for academic and professional audiences
Introduces the academic plan of study with a goal statement that details career and/or personal goals, but introduction is not concise, is illogical, or is not written in a manner appropriate for academic and professional audiences
Does not introduce the academic plan of study with a goal statement that details career and/or personal goals
8.34
Goal Statement: SMART Goal
Meets “Proficient” criteria and demonstrates an advanced ability to utilize goal principles in supporting feasible plans of academic study
Develops a SMART goal related to the academic plan of study
Develops a SMART goal related to the academic plan of study, but goal is illogical or irrelevant
Does not develop a SMART goal related to the academic plan of study
8.33
Identify Three Enduring Skills
Meets “Proficient” criteria and makes cogent connections between enduring skills and associated courses
Identifies three enduring skills that define any prior or planned academic learning, and names three courses that support each skill
Identifies three enduring skills that define any prior or planned academic learning, and three courses that support each skill, but courses do not logically support the skills, or identifies less than three courses and/or skills
Does not identify three enduring skills and does not name courses that support each skill
6.25
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Critical Elements Exemplary (100%) Proficient (85%) Needs Improvement (55%) Not Evident (0%) Value Strengths and Weaknesses
Meets “Proficient” criteria and makes cogent connections between prior or planned academic learning and personal strengths and weaknesses
Explains how any prior or planned academic learning relates to personal strengths and weaknesses, and refers to specific skills being developed
Explains how any prior or planned academic learning relates to personal strengths and weaknesses, but does not refer to a specific skills, or response is cursory or illogical
Does not explain how prior or planned learning relates to personal strengths and weaknesses
8.33
Prior or Planned Academic Learning
Meets “Proficient” criteria and demonstrates sophisticated understanding of how any prior or planned academic learning connects to the goal statement and academic plan of study
Explains how any prior or planned academic learning connects to the goal statement and academic plan of study, including why this knowledge is valuable to goals and how it will help plan the future
Explains how any prior or planned learning connects to the goal statement, but not the academic plan of study, or does not address why this knowledge is valuable to personal goals, or explanation is cursory or illogical
Does not explain how any prior or planned learning connects to the goal statement and academic plan of study, and does not address why this knowledge would be valuable to personal goals
6.25
Concentration: Defend
Meets “Proficient” criteria, and level of support provided demonstrates thorough understanding of how the chosen concentration will help achieve personal or professional goals
Defends the chosen concentration based on how it will help achieve personal or professional goals, supporting the defense by referencing the knowledge to be gained in the concentration
Defends the chosen concentration based on how it will help achieve personal or professional goals, but defense is cursory or not supported by referencing the knowledge to be gained in the concentration
Does not defend the chosen concentration based on how it will help achieve personal or professional goals
8.33
Concentration: Research
Meets “Proficient” criteria, and support provided demonstrates thorough understanding of knowledge and skills needed in chosen concentration
Backs up assertions with research that supports concentration choice
Backs up assertions with research that supports concentration choice, but research is cursory or does not adequately support need to acquire particular knowledge
Does not back up assertions with research that supports concentration choice
8.33
Coursework: Degree Requirements
Meets “Proficient” criteria, and level of detail provided demonstrates thorough understanding of all degree requirements
Provides an organized list of degree requirements and completed and planned coursework
Provides a list of degree requirements and completed and planned coursework, but list is incomplete or unorganized or contains inaccuracies
Does not provide a list of degree requirements or completed and planned coursework
8.33
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Critical Elements Exemplary (100%) Proficient (85%) Needs Improvement (55%) Not Evident (0%) Value Coursework: Annotation
Meets “Proficient” criteria and demonstrates sophisticated understanding of why each course is applicable to personal or professional goals
Provides a brief annotation for each course listed that illustrates why the course is applicable to personal or professional goals
Provides a brief annotation for each course listed that illustrates why the course is applicable to personal or professional goals, but annotations are illogical
Does not provide a brief annotation of each course listed that illustrates why the course is applicable to personal or professional goals
6.25
Academic Rationale: Relevance of the
Degree
Meets “Proficient” criteria and makes cogent connections between the relevance of the degree in achieving goals, the benefits of the degree, and the value of diverse education in achieving future goals
Discusses the larger relevance of the degree in achieving goals, including the benefits of the degree and the value of diverse education in achieving future goals
Discusses the larger relevance of the degree in achieving goals, including the benefits of the degree and the value of diverse education in achieving future goals, but discussion is cursory or illogical
Does not discuss the larger relevance of the degree in achieving goals
6.25
Academic Rationale: Research
Meets “Proficient” criteria, and research provided illustrates a sophisticated awareness of research that will support achievement of goals
Incorporates relevant research that will support achievement of goals
Incorporates research, but it is cursory or not entirely relevant to goals
Does not incorporate research that will support achievement of goals
8.33
Articulation and Presentation:
Citations, Grammar, Spelling, or Syntax
Has no major or minor errors related to citations, grammar, spelling, and/or syntax that affect the clarity of the submission
Has several minor errors and no major errors related to citations, grammar, spelling, and syntax that affect the clarity of the submission
Has major errors related to citations, grammar, spelling, and syntax that significantly affect the clarity of the submission
8.34
Articulation and Presentation:
Organized
Meets “Proficient” criteria and demonstrates masterful use of fundamental writing and organization skills
Is organized in a professional and easy-to-read format
Is partly organized in a professional and easy-to-read format, but some sections are unclear or illogical
Is not organized in a professional and easy-to-read format
8.34
Total 100%