Experiential learning is the process of developing knowledge and skills from direct experience - learning through action. 

Experiential learning at UNT Dallas is two-fold: it serves to help students transition more gracefully from college to the work place setting by gaining marketable skills, real world experience, and industry networks; it also serves to improve the quality of learning by understanding how text book learning applies to the real world by increasing the likelihood of using the knowledge, critical thinking skills, and habits of mind acquired in their studies.

Credit bearing experiential learning - Students will take courses that are experiential learning focused or require some level of experiential learning, either field-based or through classroom participation. 

Non-crediting bearing experiential learning - Students can participate in experiential learning opportunities offered through campus sponsored activities, the Urban SERCH Institute, and students organizations.


Types of High Impact Experiential Learning:

Internships

Students gain direct experience in a work setting - usually related to their career interests - and to give them the benefit of supervision and coaching from professionals in the field. If the internship is taken for course credit, students complete a project or paper that is approved by a faculty member. Practicum and Student Teaching are a form of experiential learning in this capacity.

Service Learning, Community Based Learning

Students benefit from a teaching and learning strategy that integrates meaningful community service with instruction and reflection. Students gain direct experience with issues they are studying in the curriculum and with ongoing efforts to analyze and solve problems in the community. A key element in these programs is the opportunity students have to both apply what they are learning in real-world settings and reflect in a classroom setting on their service experiences. These programs model the idea that giving something back to the community is an important college outcome, and that working with community partners is good preparation for citizenship, work, and life.

Learning Communities / First Year Seminars

Students are encouraged to integrate learning across courses and to be involved with "big questions" that matter beyond the classroom. Students take two or more linked courses as a group and work closely with one another and with their professors. Many learning communities explore a common topic and/ or common readings through the lenses of different disciplines. Some deliberately link “liberal arts” and “professional courses”; others feature service learning. The first year seminars / experiences bring small groups of students together with faculty or staff on a regular basis. The highest-quality first-year experiences place a strong emphasis on critical inquiry, frequent writing, information literacy, collaborative learning, and other skills that develop students’ intellectual and practical competencies.

Undergraduate Research

Students are involved with actively contested questions, empirical observation, cutting-edge technologies, and the sense of excitement that comes from working to answer important questions. This can emphasize writing at all levels of instruction and across the curriculum, including final- year projects. Students may be encouraged to produce and revise various forms of writing for different audiences in different disciplines. Approaches range from being writing intensive and collaborative in assignments and projects. 

Diversity & Global Learning

Courses and programs that help students explore cultures, life experiences, and worldviews different from their own. These studies—which may  address U.S. diversity, world cultures, or both—often explore “difficult differences” such as racial, ethnic, and gender inequality, or continuing struggles around the globe for human rights, freedom, and power. Frequently, intercultural studies are augmented by experiential learning in the community and/or by study abroad.