Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 April 2005
In recent years, sparked by the path-breaking reports issued by the American Associationof Colleges and Universities (AACU) in 1991 (Wahlke 1991), the political science professionhas paid an increasing amount of attention to the relationship between the structure of thepolitical science major and student learning outcomes. A few studies have recently sought toexamine this relationship empirically (Breuning, Parker, and Ishiyama 2001; Ishiyama and Hartlaub 2003; Ishiyama and Breuning 2003). However, these studies have focused largely on using thepolitical science curriculum as an independent variable (i.e., affecting student outcomes)and in most cases have been limited to one or two institutions (with the exception ofIshiyama 2004). No study has broadly and systematically examinedvariations in curricular design across several institutions, nor has any study examinedwhich factors affect how institutions have structured their majors in the way they have. This paper addresses this dearth by broadly surveying a number ofliberal arts and sciences colleges and universities across 10 Midwestern states (Illinois,Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Missouri, Minnesota, Nebraska, Ohio, and Wisconsin) todetermine how many political science programs structure their majors in ways according tothe recommendations made by the Wahlke report.