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George Kuh SAIR New Orleans, LA September 26, 2010

NILOA: Tracking the Status of Outcomes Assessment in the U.S. George Kuh SAIR New Orleans, LA September 26, 2010.

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George Kuh SAIR New Orleans, LA September 26, 2010

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  1. NILOA: Tracking the Status of Outcomes Assessment in the U.S. • George Kuh • SAIR • New Orleans, LA • September 26, 2010

  2. “Colleges… do so little to measure what students learn between freshman and senior years. So doubt lurks: how much does a college education – the actual teaching and learning that happens on campus – really matter?” David Leonhardt, NYTimes, Sept 27, 2009

  3. Advance Organizers • What kind of information about student learning and institutional effectiveness is compelling and useful for: (a) guiding improvement efforts? (b) responding to accountability demands? • What can be done to motivate encourage faculty and staff to use assessment results to enhance student learning?

  4. Advance Organizers What are the obstacles that must be addressed for IR to help advance the assessment agenda? What could you and/or NILOA do to overcome these challenges?

  5. Overview • The current context for assessment • The NILOA agenda: activities and products • Questions to ponder

  6. Context Global Competitiveness in Degree Attainment The New Majority and Demographic Gaps Questionable Levels of Student Performance In a Most Challenging Fiscal Environment …  We Need Higher Levels of Student Attainment at an Affordable Cost

  7. Assessment 2010 • Greater emphasis on student learning outcomes and evidence that student performance measures up

  8. Assessment 2010 • Greater emphasis on student learning outcomes and evidence that student performance measures up • Demands for comparative measures • Increased calls for transparency ---public disclosure of student and institutional performance • Assessment “technology” has improved markedly, but still is insufficient to document learning outcomes most institutions claim

  9. Far too little is known about assessment practices on campuses around the country

  10. NILOA’s mission is to document SLO assessment work, identify and disseminate best practices, and support institutions in their assessment efforts www.learningoutcomesassessment.org

  11. FUNDERS • Lumina Foundation for Education • Carnegie Corporation of New York • The Teagle Foundation NATIONAL ADVISORY PANEL

  12. NILOA Activities • “Go to” Web site www.learningoutcomesassessment.org

  13. NILOA Activities • “Go to” Web site www.learningoutcomesassessment.org • National surveys

  14. Survey asked chief academic officers at all accredited 2 & 4 year colleges and universities about their assessment practices. • Survey report “More Than You Think, Less Than We Need” released October, 2009

  15. Report Summary • Perhaps more assessment underway than some acknowledge or wish to believe • More attention needed to using and reporting assessment results • Involving faculty is a major challenge • More investment likely needed to move from data to improvement

  16. “high importance” 85% Regional 80% Specialized According to Provosts, what is the driving force for assessment? a. Institutional Commitment to Improvement b. Accreditation c. Faculty & Staff Interest d. Governing Board Mandate e. None of the above

  17. Report Summary • Perhaps more assessment underway than some acknowledge or wish to believe • More attention needed to using and reporting assessment results • Involving faculty is a major challenge • More investment likely needed to move from data to improvement • Accreditation is a major force shaping assessment

  18. Assessment driven more by accreditation and commitment to improve than external pressures from government or employers

  19. Accreditation tops the list for uses of assessment data

  20. Regional accreditors cite deficiencies in student learning outcomes assessment with greater frequency • Middle States - 2/3 of institutions have follow-up; number one reason being assessment • NEASC - 80% of institutions asked for follow-up on student learning outcomes assessment • HLC - 7 out of 10 institutions are being monitored; the vast majority for student learning outcomes assessment.

  21. Attention to transparency in student learning outcomes assessment is growing. • Middle States, HLC, SACS consider transparency an integrity issue • NEASC increased requests for “candor” by asking for student learning goals and requirements to be published so that they are “readily available” • WASC-ACCJC ask every school to publish their student learning outcomes as eligibility requirement

  22. NILOA 2010 Program-Level Survey • All accredited, undergraduate degree-granting 2- and 4-year public, private, and for-profit institutions in the US (n=2,678) • Provosts asked to identify 3-4 program areas to respond

  23. NILOA 2010 Program-Level Questionnaire Preview survey at: www.niloasurvey.org

  24. NILOA Activities • “Go to” Web site www.learningoutcomesassessment.org • National surveys • Web scans: 725 institutions

  25. Exploring the Landscape: What Institutions Post on Their Websites About Student Learning Outcomes Assessment Activities Natasha Jankowski & Julia Makela Campuses report doing more assessment than they make accessible on their institutional websites. The typical institution shows only an average of two assessment activities. When information is posted, it is more often intended for internal institutional audiences

  26. Web Scan Guiding Questions • What does the institution display on its website regarding student learning outcomes assessment? • On which web pages is information about assessment of student learning outcomes located?

  27. Say vs. Show More assessment activity was reported by chief academic officers than was available on institution websites

  28. NILOA Activities • “Go to” Web site www.learningoutcomesassessment.org • National surveys • Web scans: 725 institutions • Occasional papers & products

  29. Occasional Paper #1 Assessment, Accountability, and Improvement Peter T. Ewell Assessments of what students learn during college are typically used for either improvement or accountability, and occasionally both.  Yet, since the early days of the “assessment movement” in the US, these two purposes of outcomes assessment have not rested comfortably together.  www.learningoutcomeassessment.org/OccasionalPapers.htm9e

  30. Two Paradigms of Assessment Ewell, Peter T. (2007). Assessment and Accountability in America Today: Background and Context. In Assessing and Accounting for Student Learning: Beyond the Spellings Commission. Victor M. H. Borden and Gary R. Pike, Eds. Jossey-Bass: San Francisco.

  31. Looking Back: What’s Been Accomplished? • Assessment Seen as Legitimate • Goals for Learning Established • A “Semi-Profession” for Assessment • Much Better Instruments and Methods

  32. Looking Back: What Remains to be Done? • Authentic Faculty Ownership • Assessment Still an “Add-On” • Use of Information for Improvement is Underdeveloped • Sincere Institutional Engagement with Accreditors in Assessment

  33. Occasional Paper #2 Three Promising Alternatives for Assessing College Students’ Knowledge and Skills Banta, Griffin, Flateby & Kahn Of the various ways to assess student learning outcomes, many faculty members prefer what are called “authentic” approaches that document student performance during or at the end of a course or program of study.   www.learningoutcomeassessment.org/OccasionalPapers.htm

  34. Occasional Paper #3 Connecting the Dots Between Learning and Resources Jane V. Wellman With all the talk about the need for more accountability, surprisingly little is known about what kind of resources an institution needs in order to produce a given level of student attainment.   www.learningoutcomeassessment.org/OccasionalPapers.htm

  35. Wellman’s Conclusions • Intentionality matters as much or more than money alone • Spending on instruction and student services pays off in learning, retention and graduation • Excess units cost institutions money, cost students in time and money, and do not get students to the finish line

  36. Occasional Paper #4 Opening Doors for Faculty Involvement in Assessment Pat Hutchings Thekey to effectively using assessment data to improve student learning is to engage faculty in meaningful ways in this critical activity. This paper discusses the challenges inherent in and opportunities for doing so. www.learningoutcomeassessment.org/OccasionalPapers.htm

  37. Occasional Paper #5 Valuing Assessment: Cost-Benefit Considerations Randy Swing & Christopher Coogan How can a campus know when enough spending is really enough? The authors systematically unpack what needs to be taken into account when allocating resources to the assessment of student learning outcomes. www.learningoutcomeassessment.org/OccasionalPapers.htm

  38. NILOA Activities • “Go to” Web site www.learningoutcomesassessment.org • National surveys • Web scans: 725 institutions • Occasional papers & products • Interviews & focus groups with key actors: -- AAC&U -- ACE -- AIR

  39. Perspectives from Campus Leaders on the Current State of Student Learning Outcomes Assessment Jillian Kinzie This paper highlights lessons from four focus group sessions with campus leaders--presidents, provosts, academic deans and directors of institutional research from a variety of two- and four-year institutions-- regarding their perspectives on the state of learning assessment practices on their campuses. Forthcoming Fall 2010

  40. NILOA Activities • “Go to” Web site www.learningoutcomesassessment.org • National surveys • Web scans: 725 institutions • Occasional papers & products • Interviews & focus groups with key actors: -- AAC&U -- ACE -- AIR -- Accreditors

  41. Regional Accreditation and Student Learning Outcomes Assessment: Mapping the Territory Staci Provezis This paper examines the policies and procedures at each of the seven regional accreditation organizations, as they relate to student learning outcomes assessment.  Occasional Paper #6 www.learningoutcomeassessment.org/OccasionalPapers.htm

  42. Connecting State Policies on Assessment with Institutional Assessment Activity Peter Ewell, Natasha Jankowski & Staci Provezis Two national surveys—one at the state level and one at the institutional level—show that state policies matter to student learning outcome assessment activities at both public and private institutions. http://www.learningoutcomesassessment.org/NILOAstatestudy2010.htm

  43. Eight “assessment active states: Georgia Rhode Island Kentucky South Dakota Minnesota Tennessee Oklahoma West Virginia

  44. Institutions in Assessment-Active States: • Use general knowledge/ skills measures (CLA, CAAP, MAPP) 58% vs 38%. • Use valid samples with national surveys (83% vs 58%) • Use employer surveys (76% vs 62%) and employer interviews (57% vs 47%) • Have common set of student learning outcomes (83% vs 76%) • No differences re public and privates, transparency

  45. Measuring Quality in Higher Education (Vic Borden & Brandi Kernel, 2010) Web-based inventory hosted by AIR of assessment resources. Key words can be used to search the four categories: • instruments (examinations, surveys, questionnaires, etc.); • software tools and platforms; • benchmarking systems and data resources; • projects, initiatives and services. http://applications.airweb.org/surveys/Default.aspx

  46. NILOA Products Coming Soon • Assessment and accountability in community colleges (Seybert & Ewell) • What the field needs from student affairs in assessment (Schuh & Gansemer-Topf) • The role of institutional research in assessment(Volkwein) • From gathering to using assessment results: Lessons from the Wabash National Longitudinal Study(Blaich & Wise)

  47. Ponder this: • What is driving assessment of learning outcomes on your campus? • How effectively does your institution assess student learning outcomes? • What is needed to take assessment to the next level to further both assessment and improvement? • How available are your assessment results?? • Where are the data posted? Are the data password protected?

  48. Would it help if we agreed on common student learning outcomes (SLOs) for all undergraduates and expressed SLOs in the same language? • Should an evidence guide be developed that institutions and accreditation teams can use to standardize and examine institutional assessment activities? • Should a template be developed that institutions can use to make public information about SLOs, like VSA, but focused on learning?

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