Neha Patil (Editor)

Minerva Schools at KGI

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Other name
  
Minerva Schools at KGI

Type
  
Private

Undergraduates
  
around 310

Dean
  
Stephen Kosslyn

Motto in English
  
Critical Wisdom

Established
  
2012

Phone
  
+1 415-649-7658

Founded
  
2012

Location
  
San Francisco, California, U.S.

Address
  
1145 Market St, San Francisco, CA 94103, USA

Motto
  
Sapientia Critica (Critical Wisdom)

Similar
  
San Francisco Friends S, Mission Rock Resort, Propeller, Bus Stop, Southern Pacific Brewing

Profiles

The Minerva Schools at KGI is a non-profit, four-year undergraduate program founded as a partnership between the Minerva Project and Keck Graduate Institute (KGI), a member of the Claremont University Consortium. Minerva’s founder, former Snapfish president Ben Nelson, has referred to it as "the first elite American university to be launched in a century." Larry Summers, former Harvard University President and United States Secretary of the Treasury, chaired its first advisory board, joined by Bob Kerrey, former Democratic senator from Nebraska and president of the New School.

Contents

History

In April 2012, Minerva Project received US$25,000,000 in venture funding from Benchmark Capital to create the undergraduate program that would become the Minerva Schools at KGI. Stephen Kosslyn joined Minerva in March 2013 to serve as Founding Dean. Prior to joining Minerva, Kosslyn served as Director of the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford University and Dean of Social Sciences at Harvard University. Kosslyn was responsible for hiring the heads of the four colleges in the School of Arts & Science and overseeing the development of Minerva's seminar-based curriculum. In July 2013, Minerva Project partnered with the Keck Graduate Institute to officially launch the Minerva Schools at KGI.

Minerva received WASC regional accreditation for five of its programs: the Bachelor of Science in Social Sciences, the Bachelor of Arts in Arts and Humanities, the Bachelor of Science in Natural Sciences, the Bachelor of Science in Computational Sciences, and the Bachelor of Science in Business.

For its 2014 Founding Class, Minerva received 2,464 applications and granted 69 acceptances resulting in a 2.8% acceptance rate making Minerva "the most selective undergraduate program in U.S. history." The school's Founding Class matriculated in Fall 2014, numbering 29 students, each of whom received a full four-year scholarship.

An additional US$70,000,000 in funding to the Minerva Schools at KGI was announced in October 2014.

In 2015, Minerva admitted 220 students out of 11,000 applicants – a 2% acceptance rate. In 2016, only 1.9% of 16,000 applicants have been admitted.

Faculty

Stephen Kosslyn is the first Dean of Faculty and was responsible for hiring the first four heads of the School of Arts & Science:

  • Dr. Brian Ross as Dean of Social Sciences
  • Dr. Richard Holman as Dean of Computational Sciences
  • Dr. Vicki Chandler as Dean of Natural Sciences
  • Dr. Judith Brown as Dean of Arts and Humanities.
  • Dr. John Percival as Dean of Business
  • In January 2015, Minerva announced the hiring of Dr. Vicki Chandler as Dean of the College of Natural Sciences. Chandler was previously the Chief Program Officer of the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation and a Professor in the Departments of Plant Sciences and the BIO5 Institute at the University of Arizona.

    Tenure is not available, and faculty are hired under three-year contracts., and professors receive extensive training on how to use Minerva's proprietary learning platform, The Active Learning Forum. Faculty retain intellectual property rights to their research. Minerva does not employ any librarians, relying instead on the library services at Claremont, parent of KGI.

    Pedagogy

    Minerva systematically applies a 1972 study that shows that memory is enhanced by “deep” cognitive tasks. Such tasks include working with material, applying it and arguing about it instead of rote memorization. All classes begin with a pop quiz, with potentially a second one later in the class, that is claimed to increase retention. Furthermore, courses are conducted as online seminars capped at 19 students and traditional lectures are banned. The automation allows fine-grained tracking of student progress.

    Students initially take four “Cornerstone Courses” that introduce "Habits of Mind" and "Foundational Concepts" that cut across the sciences and humanities. In a science class, for example, students develop a deep understanding of the need for controlled experiments. In a humanities class, they learn the classical techniques of rhetoric and develop basic persuasive skills. The curriculum then builds from that foundation. Minerva encourages students to use massive open online courses to learn what is typically taught in first-year courses.

    Facilities

    Minerva maintains two residence halls in San Francisco, California, one in the Nob Hill neighborhood and one on Market Street, as well as one in Berlin and Buenos Aires. Further residence halls are planned to open in Seoul, Hyderabad and London. Istanbul was removed from the list of prospective cities in July 2016 following political instability in Turkey.

    Minerva has no classroom facilities, since all classes are conducted through an active learning platform developed by the school, focused on participation and intellectual engagement.

    References

    Minerva Schools at KGI Wikipedia