Have We Reached The Tipping Point For Residential Curriculum Model Adoption?

Roompact “Perspective” posts are opportunities for individual staff members to work out ideas and provide their individual thoughts and opinions on a given topic.


Our vantage point at Roompact gives us unique insights into the industry. Given the large number of schools we work with and interact with, we’re often able to begin to see trends before others in the field. One thing we have discussed is the increasing use of curricular models by departments of residence life and education. In particular, we have noticed an acceleration within the last two years. This left us wondering: Have we reached a tipping point for residential curriculum? Will curricular approaches be near universally adopted within the coming years?

In answering this, history can be our guide. The Residential Curriculum Institute has existed for a little over a decade and has continued to grow each year.  The most recent Institute included hundreds of participants, and within the last two years the Institute had to turn potential registrants away due to overwhelming demand. We have also noticed these trends at Roompact. Within the last 2 years almost every school we interact with states that they either have a curriculum, or are in the beginning stages of creating one. The rise of curricular approaches is one of the reasons why we have enhanced our software with features and solutions designed specifically with curriculum in mind. Being on the innovative edge also means we are the only software company to design our software specifically for this approach.

Diffusion of Innovation

Two theories that may help explain how this phenomenon has taken hold come from Everett Rogers and Mortin Grodzins, two theorists working in the 1960s. In 1962, Everett Rogers’ first put forward his theory on the “Diffusion of Innovations.” This theory, which draws from the fields of communications, sociology, and organizational studies, provides a model for how new ideas and products are adopted over time. Diffusion, or the spread of these new ideas and products, is influenced by social factors, as well as the benefits of the innovation itself, and the cultures of the organizations adopting the innovation.

The above bell curve comes for Rogers’ theory and provides an easy visual way of understanding this phenomenon. The Innovators are the individuals and schools first adopting the innovation. In terms of residential curriculum, these Innovators would likely be the schools present at the very first Residential Curriculum Institutes. Experimenting with this new approach required a lot of risk and openness to change, and these schools, although small in number, were integral to the curricular approach’s early development and growth.

As the Institute began to become more popular, the initial faculty set out to better define and hone the model. This included the introduction of the Ten Essential Elements, occurring around the time of the third Institute. By the fourth Institute, there were enough institutions experimenting with the model that the schedule began to include “showcase sessions”–highlighting the individual curricula on different campuses. This marked entry into the Early Adopters stage.

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Fast forward to the most recent 10th and 11th Institutes in 2016 and 2017, and we’ve begun to notice a shift towards the Early Majority. You now find sessions on curriculum at almost all of the major professional associations. We, at Roompact, have heard more from campuses interested in our curriculum software and educational and consulting services. And finally, the Residential Curriculum Institute is more popular than ever. This seems to indicate we may be reaching a tipping point.

The concept of a “tipping point” in sociology was first used by Morton Grodzins in the 1960s when he adapted its use from the physical sciences. A tipping point is an event or point in time at which an idea or phenomenon reaches a critical mass such that subsequent adoption or change occurs very rapidly. In 2006 Malcolm Gladwell brought this concept to a more popular audience in his work, The Tipping Point: How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference.

So have we reached a tipping point? From our vantage point we have. The curricular approach is not longer a niche idea, but one that has gone mainstream. What do you think?

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