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Results from the Noel-Levitz Student Satisfaction Inventory (SSI) at Shoreline Community College, measuring 12 dimensions of Community College Education. The study focuses on importance, satisfaction, and the gap between them, with comparisons and historical data included.
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Student Satisfaction @ Shoreline Community College Results from the Noel-Levitz Student Satisfaction Inventory (SSI)
Description First selected for administration in Fall, 2001 Focus on two critical elements: Importance and Satisfaction and the gap between the two Well-established reliability and validity Availability of regional and national comparison data
Description • Availability of companion employee survey (Institutional Priorities Survey--IPS) to compare student/employee perceptions • Included 10 locally developed questions in the same importance/satisfaction measurement format
Measures 12 Dimensions of Community College Education (In order of perceived importance at Shoreline—both years) • Instructional Effectiveness (quality of instruction, course variety, availability of faculty) • Academic Advising/Counseling (primarily advising) • Registration Effectiveness (helpfulness of personnel, bookstore staff, policies) • Safety and Security (parking, lighting, staff) • Concern for the Individual (fair treatment, concern for success)
Measures 12 Dimensions of Community College Education (In order of perceived importance at Shoreline—both years) • Academic Services (library, labs, tutoring) • Campus Climate (welcoming atmosphere, attention to individual needs, approachability of staff, community reputation) • Admissions and Financial Aid • Service Excellence (helpfulness of staff in various areas) • Student Centeredness (caring staff, quality of experience)
Measures 12 Dimensions of Community College Education (In order of perceived importance at Shoreline—both years) • Campus Support Services (career services, veterans services, orientation) • Responsiveness to Diverse Populations (satisfaction only)
History and Sampling • Administered in late Fall Quarter 2001 and 2003 • Sample of classes structured to assure proportionate representations of disciplines and times of day. • Sample for 2003 included 92 classes, 1785 students (unduplicated) • Administration by volunteer proctors
History and Sampling • 2003 return rate: 1268 (71%) – Similar to 2001 • Demographic comparisons of population and actual survey returns indicate sample was an accurate reflection of the campus at large • Continue administration on regular basis in future years to monitor satisfaction • Explore web-administration alternative to minimize impact on instructional time.
Dissemination of Results • 3 Formats • Electronic reports prepared by publisher available on intranet • Detailed summary prepared locally—available on intranet (http://intranet.shore.ctc.edu/intranetiear/Surveys/surveys.htm) • Hard copy (most detail) at Library reserve desk
Dissemination of Results • Presentations to full student services staff, Student Success Committee, and one academic division
Results • Scale review • Importance: 1=low; 7=high importance • Satisfaction: 1=low; 7=high satisfaction • Gap: publisher suggests that an importance-satisfaction gap of 1.5 scale points or greater should be a focus of concern (for high-importance areas). This was used in local analysis along with 1.25 as a marginal gap score
Strengths • Instructional Effectiveness: • Instructional excellence • Course variety • Knowledge and availability of faculty • Opportunities for intellectual growth
Strengths • Registration Effectiveness: • Helpfulness of registration personnel • Clear and well-publicized policies and procedures • Helpfulness of bookstore staff*
Strengths • Academic Services: • Adequacy of library resources and services* • Adequacy and accessibility of computer labs • Helpfulness of library staff
Challenges • Safety and Security: • Perceived adequacy of parking spaces • Lighting and security of parking areas*
Challenges • Academic Advising (marginal gap): • Advisors’ knowledge of transfer requirements • Help with reaching educational goals • Concern with individual success
Challenges • Instructional Effectiveness • Timely feedback to students (marginal) • Early warnings to students doing poorly in class (marginal)*