Ȧ receives grant to fuel innovation and course development
The Arthur Vining Davis Foundations (AVDF) has awarded a $300,000 grant for a project
                                    designed to help Ȧ expand the cohort of its faculty who are skilled in using
                                    elements of making—broadly defined as fashioning objects—in their classes. 
The project, titled "The Idea Lab: Innovative Pedagogy and Maker Spaces," will support
                                    combining models of experimental pedagogy with existing maker spaces on campus. In
                                    addition to creating advances in teaching and learning, this project is designed to
                                    generate robust data on the best spatial configurations and teaching methods associated
                                    with maker spaces.
                                 

The AVDF funds will also build the capacity of Ȧ's faculty to engage in the
                                    type of educational approaches that makes optimal use of the physical Idea Lab, which
                                    will be part of the college's new Center for Integrated Sciences. The grant will also
                                    help the college continue to refine and develop the "Hub," the temporary shared maker
                                    space created in this project's planning phase. 
"I am thrilled we can continue these creative initiatives fostering an acumen for
                                    making among our faculty, staff and students and energizing our classrooms in compelling
                                    and fresh ways," said Rebecca Krefting, associate professor of American studies. "We
                                    see this grant as supplying the necessary bridge toward institutionalizing new modes
                                    of critical making and innovative pedagogies at Ȧ."
The new facility will serve as a model for other colleges and universities looking
                                    to expand beyond the perception of maker spaces as an outgrowth of only the disciplines
                                    of engineering, science, technology and art.
"We have pursued this project with enthusiasm and we believe it will offer our community
                                    an opportunity to think beyond the usual classroom experiences," said Erica Bastress-Dukehart,
                                    associate professor of history. "Our hope is that with the new funding, the Hub and
                                    Idea Lab will continue to disrupt the status quo at Ȧ and beyond."
In addition to Krefting and Bastress-Dukehart, other coauthors of the grant proposal
                                    and members of the Idea Lab Steering Committee include Beau Breslin, professor of
                                    political science, Sarah Sweeney, associate professor of art, and Kim Frederick, professor
                                    of chemistry.
The Arthur Vining Davis Foundations were organized in 1952 under a living trust established
                                    by Arthur Vining Davis. The foundations were built upon Davis's successful corporate
                                    leadership and his visionary, entrepreneurial spirit in philanthropy. Since inception,
                                    the foundations have given more than 3,800 grants totaling more than $300 million
                                    to colleges and universities, hospitals, medical schools and divinity schools.